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Can You Hear Us?

De: Can You Hear Us?
  • Resumen

  • Can You Hear Us? is a podcast by Monica Abad Yang and Madiera Dennison in partnership with the Department of International Development at LSE. The podcast is the first initiative of its kind in the Department and has the overall aim to prioritise BIPOC women and femmes' specific experiences and narratives by creating a space where we can discuss a multitude of topics that affect us as women, women of colour (WOC) and women in professional spaces such as: Colourism or Work Life Balance. The name Can You Hear Us? originates from the COVID-19 pandemic as it is commonly repeated on Zoom but also symbolically reflects the work left to do to empower WOC.
    © Can You Hear Us? 2021
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Episodios
  • Andrea Ho a discussion on: US modern histographies, the carceral state and Indigenous Self-Determination
    Jul 18 2024

    In today’s episode of Can You Hear Us?, sits down with Andrea Ho, a PhD student specialising in Modern U.S. history at Yale University, a Canadian Fellow at the Organisation of American States, and an activist both on and off campus. She focuses her research on ‘building upon existing community partnership with Indigenous communities and local advocates to continue her commitment to community engaged scholarship’. We discuss the history and indigenous resistance to the carceral state, most notably focusing on the Diné (Navajo) Communities in New Mexico, United States. Tune in to listen to her discuss indigenous self-determination, racial capitalism, her involvement in Yale University’s Racial Capitalism and Carceral State Working Group, and insights into her thesis Freedom Beyond the Prison: Indigenous Incarceration and Resistance in the American West.

    Quotes from the interview:


    “Restorative justice is at the front of many people’s mind[s]. The Navajo nation, for example, practice peacemaking which is a form of dispute resolution. People are really thinking about what it means to punish someone and send them through a violent system”


    “Prisons are not a part of native societies. They are a means of political control by settlers over a group of people who are refusing to live the settler way”


    “Racial capitalism signifies a relationship between racism and capitalism which is intrinsic. Capitalism was racial from the beginning because it requires inequality. You cannot undo racism without undoing capitalism”


    “Organising and being in community with one another changes the way people view their place in society which is crucial to making any broader movement happen”



    Additional resources:
    Guest spotlight: https://history.yale.edu/people/andrea-ho
    Zachary Schrag's The Princeton Guide to Historical Research on pages 90-93 has a great explanation of historiography!

    Building Community Not Prisons (BCNP) Campaign

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    1 h y 20 m
  • So We Heard: Noura Discusses Food Maps as a Decolonial Feminist Research Methodology
    Jul 2 2024

    Prompted by our youngest team member’s desire for shorter podcasts on her regular commute to and from LSE, Can You Hear Us? is proud to present So We Heard, a series of bite-sized, informal chats dedicated to exploring academic theories, case studies, and current affairs within international development through the lens of black, indigenous, and women of color (BIWOC). With episodes lasting 30 minutes or less, Can You Hear Us team members join assistant producer, Ragini Puri, on a quick deep-dive into what topic within development is peaking their interest and why it matters.

    In this episode, Ragini is joined by Noura Nasser, a lead researcher at CYHU. Noura is a PhD candidate at the LSE and her research looks into urban food practices by and for migrant communities.

    What are food maps?

    What can we learn about urban migrant communities from food maps?

    How can food maps be used as a decolonial and feminist methodology to study urban migrant communities?

    We discuss this and a lot more in the eight episode of So We Heard. Tune in to listen!

    Resources:

    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07409710701620243?scroll=top&needAccess=true

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    27 m
  • So We Heard: Doris Discusses Social Policy and China's Three-Child Policy (Part 2)
    Mar 21 2024

    Prompted by our youngest team member’s desire for shorter podcasts on her regular commute to and from LSE, Can You Hear Us? is proud to present So We Heard, a series of bite-sized, informal chats dedicated to exploring academic theories, case studies, and current affairs within international development through the lens of black, indigenous, and women of color (BIWOC). With episodes lasting 30 minutes or less, Can You Hear Us team members join assistant producer, Ragini Puri, on a quick deep-dive into what topic within development is peaking their interest and why it matters.


    In the second part of our two-part discussion on China’s Three-Child Policy, host Ragini Puri (CYHU Assistant Producer) and Doris Huang (CYHU and SWH Researcher) discuss how generational attitudes can be shaped by social policy.


    Resources:


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHpnceEki30

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    18 m

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