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    racialized

    Explore " racialized" with insightful episodes like "A trans scholar and activist explains why trans rights are under attack", "How I Became An Accidental Sweatshop Overlord w Kristina Wong", "Making our food fairer", "Being Watched: How surveillance amplifies racist policing and threatens the right to protest" and "The Duty to Do Better: The Law Student Version" from podcasts like ""Don’t Call Me Resilient", "The Ethical Rainmaker", "Don’t Call Me Resilient", "Don’t Call Me Resilient" and "The Trauma-Informed Lawyer"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    A trans scholar and activist explains why trans rights are under attack

    A trans scholar and activist explains why trans rights are under attack

    This year we’ve seen an aggressive push to implement anti-trans legislation across the United States. There are currently more than 400 active anti-trans bills across the country.

    Some legislation denies gender-affirming care to youth – and criminalizes those health-care providers that attempt to do so. Other bills block trans students from participating in sports and still others have banned books with trans content.

    These bills have at least two things in common. They all aim to make being trans harder in an already hostile society and they are being spearheaded by the far-right.

    Where does anti-trans sentiment come from?

    The enforcement of a gender binary likely has much to do with the preservation of white power. And, violence against trans people continues as a result.

    Is Canada better?

    What do things look like in Canada? Are we a safe haven or are we following some of the same trends?

    Recently, a petition signed by almost 160,000 people asked the Canadian government to extend asylum to trans and gender non-conforming people from nations in the West, previously considered safe.

    To get a better understanding of trans histories in Canada, we are joined by Syrus Marcus Ware, a scholar, artist, activist and assistant professor in the Faculty of Humanities and School of the Arts at McMaster University. He is a co-curator of Blockorama/Blackness Yes! and a co-editor of the best-selling Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada.

    We discuss the history of anti-trans and queer actions in Canada. We also speak about backlash and ways to move forward.

    How I Became An Accidental Sweatshop Overlord w Kristina Wong

    How I Became An Accidental Sweatshop Overlord w Kristina Wong

    Kristina Wong does some pretty incredible things with her life energy and creativity - damn! 

    • You can find Kristina Wong on:
      • Facebook: @ilovekristinawong
      • Insta: @mskristinawong
      • Twitter: @mskristinawong
      • Venmo: @givekristinawongmoney

    In this episode we talked about several bodies of work she has created including:

    • The Auntie Sewing Squad
      • The massive mutual-aid network of volunteers across the United States, sewing homemade masks for vulnerable communities - like asylum seekers on the border,  which Kristina started. In early 2022 they are still sewing and involve hundreds of Aunties, shipping thousands of masks to vulnerable communities across the US. 
    • The Book = Auntie Sewing Squad: Mask Making, Radical Care, Racial Justice (released 2021) talks about America’s pursuit of global empire at the cost of its citizens, the significance of women of color performing a historically gendered and racialized invisible labor…
    • Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord
    • Kristina Wong for Pubic Office
      • She’s actually an elected official at her neighborhood council in LA’s Korea Town
      • Legit check out her hand sewn props and if you have time, her interview on Sew and So is great! (and literally a sewing podcast.)
    • Big Bad Chinese Mama.com a performance piece, her fake harem of brides - a “sophomoric” project that is still up!
    • She’s been a guest on late night shows on NBC, Comedy Central, NFX…I watched ALL of these TV spots and you’ll enjoy them too!

    Kristina references:

    • Jose Luis Valenzuela and Teatro Campesino as well as Guillermo Gomez Pena as key artists of inspiration 
    • Art to Action, as the generous fiscal sponsor for The Auntie Sewing Squad
    • Wild Harvest Food Bank is an LA food bank, operates as a grocery store for all, and their CEO Glen Corrado, 
      • $50 p/month food challenge, where she survives on that budget every month!
    • Upcoming Project? Kristina plans a concept called Food Bank Influencer working on perhaps a food bank performance space to benefit the Navajo Nation - a nation which she reports, has only 13 grocery stores spread across three states serving 300,000 tribal citizens.

    Making our food fairer

    Making our food fairer

    One out of every eight households in Canada is food insecure. For racialized Canadians, that number is higher – two to three times the national average. In this episode, Vinita asks what is happening with our food systems, and what we can do to make them fairer with two women who have been tackling this issue for years. Melana Roberts is Chair of Food Secure Canada and one of the leaders behind Canada’s first Black food sovereignty plan. Also joining the conversation is Tabitha Robin Martens, assistant professor at UBC’s Faculty of Land and Food Systems. Martens researches Indigenous food sovereignty and works with Cree communities to bolster traditional land uses.

    Show notes:
    https://theconversation.com/making-our-food-fairer-dont-call-me-resilient-ep-12-171554

    Transcript:
    https://theconversation.com/making-our-food-fairer-dont-call-me-resilient-ep-12-transcript-171583

    Related article: Why are babies going hungry in a food-rich nation like Canada?
    https://theconversation.com/why-are-babies-going-hungry-in-a-food-rich-nation-like-canada-165789

    Join The Conversation about this podcast: 

    Use hashtag #DontCallMeResilient and tag us:

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/ConversationCA  

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theconversationdotcom

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheConversationCanada

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theconversationcanada/

    Sign up for our newsletter: https://theconversation.com/ca/newsletters/

    Contact us: theculturedesk@theconversation.com

    Promo at beginning of episode:
    Telling Our Twisted Histories, CBC Podcasts:
    https://www.cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/906-telling-our-twisted-histories

    Promo at end of episode: 
    The Conversation Weekly:
    https://theconversation.com/ca/topics/the-conversation-weekly-98901

    Being Watched: How surveillance amplifies racist policing and threatens the right to protest

    Being Watched: How surveillance amplifies racist policing and threatens the right to protest

    Many of us know our personal data is being collected online and used against us – to get us to buy certain things or vote a certain way.  But for marginalized communities, the collection of data and photos has much bigger implications. Vinita is joined by two researchers who are calling for new protections for the most vulnerable populations. Yuan Stevens is the Policy Lead in the Technology, Cybersecurity and Democracy Programme at the Ryerson Leadership Lab and Wendy Hui Kyong Chun is professor and Canada 150 Research Chair in new media at Simon Fraser University.

    Show notes:
    https://theconversation.com/being-watched-how-surveillance-amplifies-racist-policing-and-threatens-the-right-to-protest-dont-call-me-resilient-ep-10-167522

    Transcript:
    https://theconversation.com/being-watched-how-surveillance-amplifies-racist-policing-and-threatens-the-right-to-protest-dont-call-me-resilient-ep-10-transcript-167523

    Related article: Intense police surveillance for Indigenous land defenders contrasts with a laissez-faire stance for anti-vax protesters
    https://theconversation.com/intense-police-surveillance-for-indigenous-land-defenders-contrasts-with-a-laissez-faire-stance-for-anti-vax-protesters-169589

    Join The Conversation about this podcast: 

    Use hashtag #DontCallMeResilient and tag us:

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/ConversationCA  

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theconversationdotcom

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheConversationCanada

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theconversationcanada/

    Sign up for our newsletter: https://theconversation.com/ca/newsletters/

    Contact us: theculturedesk@theconversation.com

    Promo at beginning of episode:
    Telling Our Twisted Histories, CBC Podcasts:
    https://www.cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/906-telling-our-twisted-histories

    BIPOC: Can a term be too inclusive?

    BIPOC: Can a term be too inclusive?

    The acronym BIPOC has been around for years-but in the wake of the murder of George Floyd and BLM protests across North America this summer, it's been thrust into the spotlight. Is this hot-button term inclusive or homogenizing? Does it signal solidarity or perpetuate erasure? Pippa and Karina break down BIPOC from a uniquely Canadian perspective with help from Paige Galette, a queer Black artist and organizer from Ontario, as well as France Trépanier, an artist and curator of Kanien’kehà:ka and French ancestry and the co-director of the initiative Primary Colours/Couleurs primaires.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Chatting with Soong Chan Rah | Being Christians in a Racialized Society

    Chatting with Soong Chan Rah |  Being Christians in a Racialized Society

    We had the pleasure of sitting down with Soong Chan Rah to discuss the reality of America as a racialized society, the dynamics therein, and some ways Christians can respond. We had a great time with the interview, and we think you will as well. Lots to glean!


    About Soong-Chan Rah:
    Soong-Chan Rah (ThD, Duke Divinity School) is Milton B. Engebretson Professor of Church Growth and Evangelism at North Park Theological Seminary in Chicago, Illinois. He is the author of Prophetic Lament, The Next Evangelicalism, and Many Colors, as well as coauthor of Unsettling Truths, Forgive Us, and Return to Justice, and coeditor of Honoring the Generations.


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    ...About "Woke" Terminology (Part 1)

    ...About "Woke" Terminology (Part 1)

    Transcript available here.

    In part 1 of 2, we break down some of the vocab we've been using to talk about different experiences of race including BIPOC, QTBIPOC, racialized, marginalized, and KKKanada/AmeriKKKa. Visit dothekidsknow.ca for an easily sharable and referenceable summarized glossary of terms which we will be updating periodically. 

    Do The Kids Know? is a series of conversations between friends, Prakash and Kristen, where we challenge our understanding of contemporary media, popular culture, and what it means to live as racialized millennials in KKKanada (That’s Canada spelled with three K’s) 

    Our goal for this series is to have frank discussions about the stories and nuances missed by sensationalist media as well as to uncover the ways in which white supremacy, capitalism, and colonialism is shaping our movements and behaviours. 

    Keep tuning in to be a part of the conversation… don’t be a kid who doesn’t know!


    Find us: @dothekidsknow

    Email us: dothekidsknow@gmail.com

    Support us: https://patreon.com/dothekidsknow


    Artwork by Daniela Silva (https://instagram.com/danielasilvatrujillo)

    Music by Steve Travale (https://stevetravale.com)


    Until next time. Stay in the know~!

    Support the show

    ------

    Do The Kids Know? is a monthly series of discussions between community workers and educators, Prakash and Kristen, that unpack race, media, popular culture, and politics in KKKanada (That’s Canada spelled with three K’s) from an anti-colonial perspective.

    Our goal is to bring nuance to sensationalist media as well as to uncover the ways in which white supremacy, capitalism, and colonialism is shaping our movements and behaviours.

    Keep tuning in to be a part of the conversation… don’t be a kid who doesn’t know!

    Find us: @dothekidsknow (Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok)
    Email us: dothekidsknow@gmail.com
    Tip us: patreon.com/dothekidsknow
    Newsletter: tinyletter.com/dothekidsknow
    Artwork by Daniela Silva (instagram.com/danielasilvatrujillo)
    Music by Steve Travale (https://stevetravale.com)

    DTKK is recorded on the traditional and unceded Indigenous lands of the Kanien’kehá:ka and Algonquin Nations. We are committed to working with Indigenous communities and leaders locally and across Turtle Island to fight for Indigenous rights, resurgence, and sovereignty.

    Until next time. Stay in the know~!

    Support the show