Community Connection Friday July 7th 2023
Community Connection Friday July 7th 2023 We Talked All Things Summer Celebration With Indiana Black Expo, Inc. President & CEO Alice Watson! Indiana Black Expo Summer Celebration, Now Thru […]
play_arrow
Episode 309: “Number 52!” ft. Rob Milton | On The Way Podcast #onthewaypodcast podcast
play_arrow
313. Best White Dike podcast
Stalemate and Strategy: Analyzing Trump’s Iran Policy podcast
Rap Your Age podcast
play_arrow
“SMOKE OUT 4/20 Special” w/ Karlous Miller & DC Youngfly in the Trap! | 85 SOUTH SHOW podcast
Trump Suggests He Attacked Iran After Markets Hit Record High podcast
play_arrow
The $Billion Opportunity Hiding in Young Talent Development podcast
play_arrow
*Replay | New Media vs. Journalism feat. Jason “Jah” Lee podcast
Years before their appointments to the highest court in the land, Supreme Court Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Clarence Thomas both walked the hallowed halls of Yale Law School as beneficiaries of affirmative action policies. After handing down the ruling on affirmative action, both justices stood to deliver their different opinions about affirmative action: Sotomayor in support, Thomas against.
To discuss this moment and how two people can have the same experience and land at drastically different conclusions, host Brittany Luse is joined by Ron Elving, Senior Editor and correspondent on NPR’s Washington desk, and Leah Wright Rigeur, professor of history at Johns Hopkins University.
Then, Brittany invites Janelle Wong, University of Maryland professor and political scientist, to unpack the various public faces of the efforts to end affirmative action – and how the myth of the model minority shifted the conversation.
You can follow us on Twitter @NPRItsBeenAMin and email us at ibam@npr.org.
Community Connection Friday July 7th 2023 We Talked All Things Summer Celebration With Indiana Black Expo, Inc. President & CEO Alice Watson! Indiana Black Expo Summer Celebration, Now Thru […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025