Racial Equity 公開
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Can we talk about…? is a podcast that invites philanthropic leaders into candid conversations with their peers to normalize the messiness of leading for racial equity and reflect on what it takes to create lasting transformation. In Season 2: Equity on the Ground our hosts Katie Hong, Robin Martin and Abby Sarmac explore what it looks like to operationalize equity on the ground in a diversity of contexts. This podcast is brought to you by The Giving Practice at Philanthropy Northwest and mad ...
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This interview series is a component of The Richmond Racial Equity Essays, a multimedia project comprising a collection of essays, video interviews and a virtual discussion series focused on racial equity in Richmond, Virginia. In this series, urban planner and diversity, equity and inclusion consultant Ebony Walden talks with Richmonders from all walks of life and sectors to explore their visions for an equitable Richmond, especially as it relates to racial equity, and the strategies that w ...
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The REACH Collaborative brings together a network of teams from six states, California, Colorado, New York, North Carolina, Texas, and Virginia. Along with coaches, equity champions, and a host of intermediary partners to strengthen credential pathways with the supports and curricular alignment that post-traditional adult learners of color ages 25 through 64 need to re-skill. The coordination of the REACH Collaborative is led by the Education Strategy Group, or ESG, in partnership with the O ...
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show series
 
We’re back for Season 2! Join our season’s hosts Katie Hong, Robin Martin and Abby Sarmac as they introduce themselves and share the ‘what’ and the ‘why’ behind Season 2: Equity on the Ground.The Giving Practice at Philanthropy Northwest による
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In our final episode, four TGP Senior Advisors – Katie Hong, Lisa McGill, Abby Sarmac and Lalitha Vaidyanathan – reflect on the stories we heard across Season 1, sharing perspectives and advice based on their work as consultants supporting a diversity of philanthropy boards and leaders along their racial equity journeys. Together they reflect on th…
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In 2020, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation committed $150M to support racial justice alongside the development of an entirely new office – the Office of Culture, Race and Equity – to incorporate equity efforts across the foundation’s culture, operations, and grantmaking. In this episode, President Larry Kramer and Chief Equity Officer Charma…
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At the intersection of racism and economics, Ebony talks with Renee Hatcher from University of Illinois Chicago Law School’s Community Enterprise & Solidarity Economy Clinic and Matthew Slaats, PHD candidate at University of Virginia and member of the Virginia Solidarity Economy Network. Renee and Matthew are part of the movement that is imagining …
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At the intersection of racial equity and housing, Ebony talks with the Former Executive Director of HAND (Housing Association of Nonprofit Developers) Heather Raspberry. They discuss HAND’s racial equity journey and their effort to center racial equity amongst their association members which include a broad spectrum of housing related organizations…
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In this special episode, founding members of The Share Fund, Estakio Beltran, Bill Marklyn and Holly Marklyn take us beyond the bounds of traditional governance and philanthropy, and into a new world of giving that makes the redistribution of wealth and power a reality. The Share Fund is an LLC rather than a foundation and is managed through a part…
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Judy Belk (senior advisor and former president and CEO of The California Wellness Foundation, also known as “Cal Wellness”) and Debra Nakatomi (CEO of NakatomiPR, trustee and former board chair of The California Wellness Foundation) exchange powerful stories of their experiences with race from childhood to the present, reflecting on what’s possible…
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Listen in as Monika Kalra Varma, the first BIPOC president & CEO of BoardSource, and Julia Wilson, BoardSource’s outgoing board chair, share powerful stories and reflections on their experiences tackling the complexities of race equity work head on as a united front at BoardSource. Together they give us a behind-the-scenes look at the intentional w…
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Intergenerational, co-leadership is a model for disrupting oppressive systems and transforming communities. In this conversation, Ebony chats with catalytic co-leaders Sherreta R. Harrison and Raymond A. Jetson of MetroMorphosis in Baton Rouge, LA. The core of their work is transformation from within, rooted in community listening, responding and c…
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En este episodio, Tanya Edelin y Dilcia Molina-Sanchez comparten sus experiencias como miembros de la junta directiva de la Fundación if para Radical Possibility. A lo largo de su conversación, Tanya y Dilcia comparten cómo se siente estar en una junta que está dispuesta a ser radical, participar en las conversaciones difíciles y tomar medidas para…
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In this episode, Tanya Edelin and Dilcia Molina share their experiences as board members of the if Foundation for Radical Possibility. Throughout their conversation, Tanya and Dilcia share what it feels like to be on a board that is willing to be radical, sit in the hard conversations, and take action to shift power to community; a board that prior…
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Philanthropy Northwest’s current and two preceding Board Chairs – Nichole June Maher, Aleesha Towns-Bain and Kevin Walker – kick off our pilot season on racial equity work at the governance level, stitching together memories across 13 years of the Philanthropy Northwest board’s racial equity journey. Together they reflect on where the board was in …
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In this episode, Beth McCaw (Founding Funder of Threshold) and LeAnne Moss (Executive Director of Renton Regional Community Foundation) share honest reflections of their personal journeys as white women in anti-racist work. Together they dig into the process of embodiment – of moving racial equity from an intellectual exercise in your head with rep…
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Listen in as Sharon (President and CEO, Yakima Valley Community Foundation) and Brenda (CEO Headwaters Foundation of Montana) share how they’ve worked with their boards and staff to transform their organizational cultures and center racial equity amid rural, politically conservative environments. Along the way, Brenda shares the complexities of doi…
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At the intersection of racism and place, Ebony talks with Africatown Community Land Trust CEO K Wyking Garrett. They discuss Africatown’s community development model formed to acquire, steward, and develop land assets that are necessary for the Black community to grow and thrive in the Central District of Seattle, Washington. They discuss the impor…
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In this episode, guest host Gianina Baker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, talks with Dr. Mara Lazda, Bronx Community College, and Dr. Mayra Padilla, Contra Costa College regarding Sustainability Through the Lens of Culturally Responsive Practices in Changing Educational Landscapes. Click the link to view a copy of this episode's transc…
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In this episode, Guest host Dr. Gianina Baker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, talks with Dr. Reyna Anaya, Community College of Aurora, Dr. Michael Baston, Cuyahoga Community College, Dr. Pamela Eddy, William & Mary, and Dr. Luis Ponjaun, Texas A & M University regarding How Do You Continue to Make Racial Equity Work a Priority with New…
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In this episode, guest host Dr. Gianina Baker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, talks with Dr. Edward Bush, Consumnes River College, Dr. Denise Henning, University of North Carolina Willmington, and Dr. Ereka Willams, Dogwood Health Trust Foundation regarding What is the Cost of Doing Nothing? Redistributing Power. Click the link to view…
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At the intersection of racism and faith, Ebony talks with Every Table ministers Charles Bolling and Jess Cook about healing, reconciliation and justice within their faith community. They discuss what it means to have an abolitionist approach to living in community, employing practices for reconciliation and repair within themselves and in community…
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In this episode, guest host Dr. Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher, University of Pittsburgh talks with Dr. Edward Bush, Consumnes River College, Dr. Felecia Commodore, Old Dominion University, and Dr. Richard Reddick, University of Texas-Austin regarding Problematizing Guided Pathways from an Activist Leadership Lens. Click the link to view a copy of this e…
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In this episode, guest host Dr. Raina Dyer-Barr, University of Pittsburgh talks with Dr. Pamela Eddy, William & Mary College, Dr. Mayra Padilla, Contra Costa College, and Dr. Luis Ponjuan, Texas A&M University regarding Scalable Implementation of Culturally Responsive Practices. Click the link to view a copy of this episode's transcripts.…
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In this episode, guest host Dr. Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher, University of Pittsburgh talks with Dr. Lorenzo Baber, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Dr. Heather Shotton, Fort Lewis College, and Dr. Ereka Williams, Dogwood Health Trust Foundation regarding Moving Beyond Diversity Toward Racial Equity in Pathways. Click the link to view a cop…
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In this episode, guest host Jason A. Keist, University of Pittsburgh talks with Dr. Michael Baston, Cuyahoga Community College, and Dr. Susana Muñoz, Colorado State University regarding Root Analysis and Addressing Structural Racism in Pathways. Click the link to view a copy of this episode's transcripts.…
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In this episode, guest host Dr. Gianina Baker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign talks with Dra. Reyna Anaya, Community College of Aurora, Dr. Denise Henning, University of North Carolina-Wilmington, and Dr. Mara Lazda, Bronx Community College regarding Inclusive and Equitable Pedagogy/Pathways and Wraparound Support Services for Students …
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Dr. Chaz Barracks speaks with Ebony from multiple perspectives and through many lenses but weaves together a dynamic history, expertise and vision for a creative, intersectional approach to advancing racial equity in Richmond.Nodderly による
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They met doing neighborhood work, and they want to disrupt the status quo of gentrification and the school to prison pipeline. Neighborhood resident Latasha James and community organizer Christopher Rashad Green speak truthfully about where we need to go and what we need to do to re-imagine our community.…
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Historians Free Bangura of Untold RVA and The Valentine’s Bill Martin, discuss how telling the story of history truthfully can spark innovation and long-term change. For them, advancing equity involves truth telling, knowing our own story and broadening the voices that highlight our past and share our future.…
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From the impacts of redlining to combatting the eviction crisis, affordable housing advocates Stephen Wade of Partnership for Smarter Growth and Virginia Poverty Law Center’s Laura Wright make their case for policy changes and greater resource allocation to move towards housing equity.Nodderly による
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Ebony talks with affordable housing leaders Greta Harris of Better Housing Coalition and Richmond Association of Realtor’s Laura Lafayette and they cast a vision for removing barriers so that everyone can thrive in Richmond.Ebony Walden による
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Patrice Shelton and Sherrell Thompson converse with Ebony about their personal and professional experiences with public housing and as community health workers. From their perspective, racial equity requires better access to health resources and affordable housing for low to moderate income Richmonders.…
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Ebony talks with Richmond Night Market and The Artisan Café co-creators Melody Short and Adrienne Cole Johsnon about how Richmond can advance racial equity by supporting Black entrepreneurship and improving community engagement.Ebony Walden による
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