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Podcasts

This podcast series focuses on the "exclusion, forced removal, and internment of Japanese-Americans," and connects it to DACA. CLS faculty Dr. Ester E. Hernàndez is featured in one episode.
(Racial Justice)
Launched in 2013 as a blog series, is now a podcast that contextualizes modern media coverage, race, and culture.
(Racial Justice)
“The black feminist podcast of your dreams,” with Roxane Gay and Tressie McMillan Cottom
(Racial Justice)
A podcast to delve into the practices we need as a community, to move through endings, and to come out whole on the other side.
(Identity and Community)
Erika Hart's podcast: If you're looking for a powerful narrative that documents "Black queer love ethics," this is it.
(Racial Justice) (LGBTQ Justice)
Where did the notion of “whiteness” come from? What does it mean?
What is whiteness for?
Scene on Radio host and producer John Biewen took a deep dive into these questions, along with an array of leading scholars and regular guest Dr. Chenjerai Kumanyika, in this fourteen-part documentary series, released between February and August 2017.
(Racial Justice)
Emmy award-winner Kamau Bell and Hari Kondabolu use their platform to contextualize racial, cultural, and religious forms of oppression that are deeply embedded in American society.
Their series began as a form of comedic relief and a brief toolbox that could help the average American fend through the Trump era.
Through extensive research, interviews with Bell Hooks and #BlackLivesMatter co-founder Alicia Garza, these two comedians offer advice for those striving to become "allies."
(Racial Justice)
A podcast on Black Excellence with two seriously opinionated hosts bringing you the real and the sometimes raw on anything happening while black.
(Racial Justice)
"What Matters combines documentary narrative with interviews to illuminate specific, timely issues, aiming to create safe dialogue to promote freedom, justice, and collective liberation."
(Identity and Community) (Racial Justice)
Though the coronavirus did not create the stark social, financial, and political inequalities that define life for many Americans, it has made them more strikingly visible than any moment in recent history. Moderated by Kimberlé Crenshaw, AAPF’s “Under The Blacklight” series seeks to interrupt the narratives, political decisions, and histories that serve as the conditions of possibility for COVID-19’s destruction.
(Identity and Community)