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Conversations from the Leading Edge

by AC4 - Columbia

Conversations from the Leading Edge is a radio show and podcast centered on Peace, Conflict, and Sustainability produced by the Advanced Consortium at the Earth Institute (AC4), a research center from the Earth Institute, Columbia University.

Copyright: All rights reserved

Episodes

EP 64 - Student Voices: What's Happening in Myanmar? — with Thu Thu May Oo & Erina Iwasaki

26m · Published 27 Jul 00:00
We are excited to announce our first episode featuring student voices! Thu Thu May Oo and Erina Iwasaki are current graduate students of Teachers College, Columbia University. They discuss their perspectives on the current situation in Myanmar and their involvement with the Myanmar Association at Columbia University (MAC). **This episode was recorded in May 2021. The producer of this episode acknowledges that the situation in Myanmar is continuously changing and there may have been some updates since the time of this recording. ** Bio(s): Thu Thu May Oo is originally from Myanmar and she is a graduate student, pursuing MS in Nutrition Education at Teachers College, Columbia University. Previously, she worked as a New Roots Food and Health Intern and a community liaison at International Rescue Committee for the Burmese refugee and immigrant communities in Seattle, Washington. She is also a freelance social and food justice writer. With her new career in nutrition education and dietetics, she hopes to work with community leaders to rebuild a healthcare system that is inclusive and more representative of Myanmar's existing diverse communities and individuals, and promote community empowerment, food and social justice, and ecological sustainability. Erina Iwasaki is a PhD candidate in Comparative and International Education at Teachers College Columbia University, and a curriculum advisor to the Khayay International School in Yangon, Myanmar. Having lived in both the Republic of Congo, Myanmar, and France for an extensive period of her childhood, her research focuses on multilingual education in West African and Southeast Asian countries. Her dissertation examines bi-multilingual education advocacy in Senegal. She is also a peace education trainer and a regular consultant for multilingual education development in Myanmar, a place she calls home. Erina holds a Master’s in Political and Moral Philosophy from the University of Paris-Sorbonne and a Diploma in American Studies at Smith College. She speaks French, Japanese, English, Burmese, and Spanish. Contacts: Email - [email protected] Facebook Account - https://www.facebook.com/mac.columbiauni For donations: https://www.mutualaidmyanmar.org/ www.zigway.co/donate This is specifically for food donations https://startsomegood.com/the-civil-disobedience-movement-cdm-in-myanmar?fbclid=IwAR1XW5A3z2LiDxaZifDbYw7DSq8xGOJ48n3kf8-uu2NVKkRr-ipH-Z70dsQ#updates Music/Sound Credits: Opening - Flashback by Monplaisir Kabar Ma Kyay Bu by Naing Myanmar Audio Clips of Protesters - Harry Tao

EP 63 - Marissa Gutiérrez-Vicario on Art and Social Change

26m · Published 01 Apr 21:57
During the difficult times we’ve been living, facing the pandemic, racism, and socioeconomic distress, art rises as a breath of fresh air, at times translating what we have difficulty putting into words, at times, magnifying social and racial issues that can no longer remain overlooked, but always a powerful tool to process reality. In this episode we talk to Marissa Gutiérrez-Vicario, the Founder and Executive Director of Art and Resistance Through Education (ARTE), an organization that helps young people amplify their voices and organize for human rights change in their communities through the arts. We explore the role of art as an educational process, as a social struggle tool, and we talk about how you can begin to explore the creation of art yourself. Learn about their work at https://www.artejustice.org/ On Instagram and Twitter: @artejustice

EP 62 - Colonialism and COVID-19: Stories that don't get to be in the headlines

45m · Published 17 Dec 17:09
In the international Covid coverage there’s a tendency for uplifting Global North countries in their efforts of control and solution creation while undermining Global South countries, as places bound to be the scenario of the worst calamities, incapable of responding efficiently to the crisis or where good covid response numbers are something surprising. Narratives are yet another aspect of the Covid-19 crisis that has been shaped by colonialism. In the final episode of this series, we talk about the harm that hegemonic distorted narratives present and dive into the stories that do not get to be in the headlines. Our guests are Bianca Santana, a journalist and writer from Brazil, a participant of Uneafro and the Black Coalition for Rights; and Alpha Daffae Senkpeni, a multimedia journalist from Liberia and the Executive Director and Editor of the Local Voices Liberia Media network. ****** GREAT NEWS ****** Why Rwanda Is Doing Better Than Ohio When It Comes To Controlling COVID-19: NPR https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/07/15/889802561/a-covid-19-success-story-in-rwanda-free-testing-robot-caregivers How Mongolia has kept the coronavirus at bay: MIT Technology Review https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/18/1007135/mongolia-coronavirus/ Not waiting for a savior: The African response to the coronavirus pandemic displays innovation and ingenuity: Africa is A Country https://africasacountry.com/2020/10/not-waiting-for-a-savior ****** LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR GUESTS’ INITIATIVES ****** Video explaining Uneafro’s initiative of Public Health Agents: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6H1CNJbgf8 The Black Coalition for Rights Manifest “As long as there is Racism there will be no democracy”: https://comracismonaohademocracia.org.br/as-long-as-there-is-racism-there-will-be-no-democracy/ The Local Voices Liberia Media network website: https://localvoicesliberia.com/ Links to some of their stories: https://localvoicesliberia.com/2020/09/01/man-who-refused-health-facility-recounts-near-death-experience/ https://localvoicesliberia.com/2020/08/02/three-covid-19-survivors-recount-experience-in-gbarpolu-county/ https://localvoicesliberia.com/2020/07/29/new-developments-allay-covid-19-fears-among-residents-of-bomi-county/ Music for this episode: Lumber Down and Raskt Landsby by Blue Dot Sessions

Ep 61 - Colonialism and COVID-19: A Global Pandemic in Need of a Local Response

40m · Published 17 Sep 18:47
Humanitarian efforts were and still are dominated by donors and organizations based in the United States and Europe. However, these efforts are frequently targeted at low and middle-income countries across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, often without taking into account the perspectives and expertise of affected persons. This system replicates colonial structures and power dynamics and is reflected in the Covid-19 response as well. In this episode, we will tackle the intersection of colonialism, COVID-19, and the need for greater support for localized responses, with an example from the city of Mogadishu in Somalia. We talk to Dr. Hodan Ali, Director of the Durable Solutions Unit, a local government body that responds to humanitarian needs. She is also the co-founder of the Refuge Hamilton Centre for Newcomer Health in Ontario Canada. For more information on the DSU: - This is their website: https://dsu.so/ - Follow them on twitter: https://twitter.com/DSUBenadir - Take a look at their strategical plan: "Moving forward: Finding lasting solutions for urban displacement" - https://dsu.so/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/DSU_strategy_report_2020_v11.pdf - Take a look at their Forced Evictions Committee report -https://dsu.so/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/idp_report-1.pdf The song you hear in this episode is "Uur Hooyo", by Hudeidi, featuring Aar Maanta, that you can find here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wxbh6a3o8bA&ab_channel=AarMaanta

EP 60 - Colonialism and COVID-19: When past is present

49m · Published 20 Aug 20:00
The so-called “discovery” of the world by European navigators in the XV century is the event that defines the beginning of the historical process known as colonialism, a system marked by the exploitation of labor and expropriation of land that is still present in different forms in the international geopolitical arena. In this episode, the first of a small series, we will discuss how these colonial structures are present in modern times and how they are reflected in the Covid-19 crisis we currently live. Our attention will focus on the Navajo Nation and the Republic of Zimbabwe. Our guests today are Dr. Farina King, a citizen of the Navajo Nation and an Assistant Professor of History as well as an affiliated faculty of Cherokee and Indigenous Studies at Northeastern State University and author of The Earth Memory Compass: Diné Landscapes and Education in the Twentieth Century; and Tinashe Goronga, a physician from Zimbabwe who is focused on social medicine, public health, and health equity. Tinashe is also member of the Global Campaign Against Racism’s, Zimbabwe chapter. ** This episode was recorded on July 10th, the data presented refers back to that moment and might have changed by now. Here are links to further the discussion, based on the conversation: NAVAJO INITIATIVES Dr. Farina King’s website - https://farinaking.com/dinedoctorhistorysyllabus/ Healing Songs sung by the Navajo and the Sioux – https://youtu.be/x1uJidwo77s The Official Navajo Nation COVID-19 Relief Fund - https://www.nndoh.org/donate.html Utah Navajo Health System - https://www.unhsinc.org/ NDN Collective COVID-19 Project – https://ndncollective.org/covid-19/ Pueblo Relief Fund - https://pueblorelieffund.org/ Far East Navajo COVID-19 Response Fund - https://www.gofundme.com/f/far-east-navajo-covid19-relief Utah Diné Bikéyah - https://utahdinebikeyah.org/contribute-2/ K'é Infoshop - http://keinfoshop.org/donate The National Council of Urban Indian Health - https://www.ncuih.org/index ZIMBABWE INITIATIVES CHEZ- health education – https://twitter.com/CHEZimbabwe Zim Citizens COVID Response - https://www.instagram.com/zimccr/ Rare Diseases & Disabilities Africa Foundation – https://www.facebook.com/RaDDA.Foundation/ Kufema - https://kufemazimbabwe.org/ Kufunda Village Community – https://www.kufunda.org/ National Art Gallery of Zimbabwe - http://www.nationalgallery.co.zw/ Institute of afrikology - https://instituteofafrikology.wordpress.com/ Women for the Environment Africa - https://www.womenforenvironment.org/ Feministing while African - https://twitter.com/FeministingWAF BRAZILIAN INITIATIVES UNEAFRO Brazil - https://uneafrobrasil.org/ Popular health agents project - https://agentespopularesdesaude.org.br/

Ep 59 - Andrea Bartoli on religious third parties in international conflict

57m · Published 06 May 17:00
In this episode, we explore the work of the Community of Sant'Egidio, a religious group connected to the catholic church that has been an important stakeholder in peace processes around the world. Andrea Bartoli, an international conflict resolution expert for over three decades and president of the Community of Sant'Egidio Foundation for Peace and Dialogue, tells us more about Sant'Egidio's work. In this episode, Bartoli talks about how the Community started, its values and challenges and he presents its more recent intervention, in South Sudan, a country that has been struggling to find its ways towards sustainable peace.

Ep 58 - Hakim Williams on Structural Violence

52m · Published 09 Apr 13:54
Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams is a prominent scholar in the area of Peace Education who shares in this interview about the work he has been developing in his home country, Trinidad and Tobago, around violence in schools and how that matter goes far beyond school walls in this and other developing countries. Williams is an Associate Professor of Africana Studies and the Director of Peace and Justice Studies at Gettysburg College. He has an Ed.D in International Education Development and Peace Education from Teachers College, also a former visiting scholar at AC4, the center behind this show. In 2017, he was a recipient of one of the inaugural Emerging Scholar Awards of the African Diaspora Special Interest Group in the Comparative and International Education Society (CIES). In 2019, he also received the Early Career Award from Teachers College at Columbia University.

Ep 57 - Peace Education in conflict settings with Felisa Tibbitts

46m · Published 03 Feb 16:24
Meet Felisa Tibbitts and her work in Peace Education. She is a Lecturer in the International Education Development Program at Teachers College here at Columbia University and Chair in Human Rights Education in the Department of Law, Economics and Governance at Utrecht University. In this interview, she tells us about her work in creating a peace and sustainable development curricula for Myanmar, a country with a turbulent history around its recent democracy and that has been on the headlines for violating the human rights of the Rohingya, a local ethnic group. The Myanmar context made us wonder: can a national peace education curriculum be implemented and have a positive impact in a such turbulent national context?

Ep 56 - Changemakers in the Peruvian Amazon, with Eliana Elías of Minga Perú

16m · Published 09 Mar 13:35
Eliana Elías, Co-founder and Executive Director of Minga Perú, sat down with us to discuss her experiences working in the Peruvian Amazon and other rural areas to design and implement strategies that combine communications, women's leadership and sustainable community development. She shares insights and stories about her initiatives with NGOs and indigenous groups on education, conservation and health. With Mikaela Luttrell-Rowland, Director of the Women, Peace and Security Program, Eliana Elías discusses the model she brings for communication and participation for social change and what peace and security mean for her and the communities she works with. For more information about Minga Peru: https://mingaperu.org/en/home/ This talk was recorded on December 20, 2018. Photo Credit: Minga Peru’s Co-Founder and Program Director, Luis González

EP 55 - Adapting to Climate Change in Honolulu, with Joshua Stanbro and Marcus Armstrong-Patterson

31m · Published 06 Feb 15:21
In January 2019, we sat down with University of Hawai`i student Marcus Armstrong-Patterson and Chief Resilience Officer of Honolulu Joshua Stanbro to discuss what the city is doing to adapt to climate change. The City and County of Honolulu Office of Climate Change, Sustainability and Resiliency (Resilience Office) was established by City Charter in 2016 with overwhelming approval by O‘ahu voters. As mandated by Charter, the Resilience Office is tasked with tracking climate change science and potential impacts on City facilities, coordinating actions and policies of departments within the City to increase community preparedness, developing resilient infrastructure in response to the effects from climate change, and integrating sustainable and environmental values into City plans, programs, and policies. As a member of the Rockefeller Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities network, the Resilience Office is also responsible for developing Oʻahu’s Resilience Strategy, which will include the City’s first-ever climate action and adaptation plan.

Conversations from the Leading Edge has 62 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 39:09:03. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 23rd 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on March 26th, 2024 14:46.

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