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Produced by Global Justice Ecology Project, Breaking Green is a podcast that talks with activists and experts to examine the intertwined issues of social, ecological and economic injustice. Breaking Green also explores some of the more outrageous proposals to address climate and environmental crises that are falsely being sold as green.
But we can't do it without you! We accept no corporate sponsors, and rely on people like you to make Breaking Green possible.
If you'd like to donate, text GIVE to 716-257-4187 or donate online at: https://globaljusticeecology.org/Donate-to-Breaking-Green (select apply my donation to "Breaking Green Podcast") -
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Have you ever had a feeling that you want to connect a bit more to your surroundings, your community, your peers, and you just aren’t sure how to gain the meaning that you need. Have you ever looked around your city and wished that you had a stronger connection to it and the people who are shaping it? Welcome to the “Climbing the Charts” podcast. Each week, your hosts - Angie Lawless and Brandon Miller will challenge you to become more involved in your community, to take on grassroot efforts where you can find meaning whether that be in your neighborhood, church, city, to learn more about your surroundings rather than just tuning them out as you drive through your neighborhood. Your ability to find meaning and contribute is within you and we are committed to helping you discover your unique abilities and how to best use those to contribute to the community around you! So, let’s go!
https://wagonwheeltitle.com/about/our-team/media/ -
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Welcome to Deep Dive, the podcast where politics, history, and queer lives intersect in engaging, in-depth conversations. I'm Dr. Shawn C. Fettig, a political scientist, and I've crafted this show to go beyond the headlines, diving into the heart of critical issues with authors, researchers, activists, and politicians. Forget surface-level analysis; we're here for the real stories, the hidden layers, and the nuanced discussions that matter.
Join me as we explore the intricate world of governance, democracy, and the challenges facing the LGBTQ+ community. Expect empathy, unique perspectives, and thought-provoking dialogue—no punditry, just genuine insights.
Instagram & Threads: @deepdivewithshawnYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjZ9grY02HMCUR34qaWhNmQ
Ready to dive in? Catch us on your favorite podcast platform, and don't forget to follow the conversation:
Got thoughts? Questions? We'd love to hear from you! Drop us a line at [email protected].
"Deep Dive" - Because the most important conversations happen below the surface. -
Each week, Poll Hub goes behind the science to explain how polling works, what survey really show, and what the numbers actually mean. Poll Hub is produced by the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion, home of America’s leading independent college public opinion poll, the Marist College Poll.
Lee Miringoff (Director of MIPO), Barbara Carvalho (Director of the Marist Poll), Jay DeDapper (Director of Strategy + Innovation), Mary Griffith (Associate Director), and frequent expert guests, dig deep to give you a look at the inner workings of polls and what they tell us about our world, our country, and ourselves. -
Dr. Chuck Stead was raised in the Village of Hillburn, in the Ramapo Mountains of Lower New York. Get the Lead Out is a chronical of the environmental degradation of a water shed and its deadly impact on an indigenous population. A skilled storyteller, Dr. Stead studied at the Vermont Institute of Social Ecology and received his PhD at the Antioch New England School of Environmental Studies. This podcast follows his journey from boyhood, hunting and trapping in the Torne Valley of Ramapo where he first discovered Ford Motor Company’s pollution of the watershed, and on to the culmination of a Forty-million-dollar clean-up. Along the way we are introduced to members of the Ramapough Lunaape Nation, as well as citizen scientists, archaeologists, herpetologists, engineers, politicians, journalists, and Dr. Steads students who experienced what it means to speak truth-to-power. We are looking into Traditional Ecological Knowledge and its application to our contemporary environmental crisis.
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In June 2004, Professor Hoppe visited the Mises Institute in Auburn to deliver an ambitious series of lectures titled Economy, Society, and History.This project brings together the core of Hoppe’s lifetime of theoretical work in one vital and cohesive source. Here we find provocative themes developed by Hoppe in the 1980s and 90s, particularly in his essays found in A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism and The Economics and Ethics of Private Property. We also find his devastating critique of democracy, made famous in his seminal book Democracy—The God That Failed.Narrated by Paul Strikwerda.
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Pricing Nature is a limited-series podcast from the Yale Center for Business and the Environment and the Yale Carbon Charge. It tells a story about the economics, politics, and history of carbon pricing, which many argue should play a critical role in any national climate policy. We feature conversations with carbon pricing experts from government, academia, and civil society. Join us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or anywhere else you listen. To learn more, visit our website, pricingnature.substack.com.
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Welcome to ’Put Em on the Couch,’ the podcast where hosts Nelson Beaulieu and Jason McCoy invite you to explore every nook and cranny of this thing called life. Listen weekly as long-time friends and educators, embark on a variety of evocative discussions and fun thought experiments. Who knows, you may even come away happier and smarter.
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Ils sont militants, artistes, chefs d’entreprise et présidents d’association et ont tous le même point commun : avoir connu une mobilité sociale et/ou géographique forte.
Trop souvent présentés à tord comme des portes drapeau de la méritocratie, ils ont accepté de témoigner sur les difficultés qu'on rencontre, aujourd’hui peut-être plus que jamais, quand on grandit dans un milieu populaire, en campagne, zone péri-urbaine et banlieue et qu'on se retrouve projetés dans des cercles d'influence ou de pouvoir.
Avoir le cul entre deux chaises, ne pas avoir les codes, ressentir un conflit de loyauté : autant de sujets qui seront abordés dans cette première saison.
Les histoires des interviewé.e.s sont plurielles mais tous portent la même conviction : leur trajectoire n’est qu’une anomalie.
Ils sont l’arbre qui cache la forêt !
Pas de fatalité qui tienne pour autant,
Eux ont décidé de faire de ces inégalités un combat de chaque instant.
Car à l’heure où les politiques n’arrivent plus à parler à l’ensemble des classes de notre société,
Où la carrière d’un premier ministre tient dans un rayon de 6 kilomètres à tout casser,
Les transclasses sont une clé, un trait d’union pour rassembler,
Et faire entendre les voix de toutes les réalités !
Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. -
Welcome to The Second Cold War Observatory, where we explore the histories and grounded realities of geopolitical rivalry from the Cold War to the present. We host conversations with academics, policymakers, and activists about how competition affects places, people, and politics around the world to foster more nuanced and open debate on contemporary rivalry. We cover diverse themes from the environment to digital connectivity and finance. Our guests present in-depth research from the institutions and places that become flashpoints of great power rivalry.
This podcast is part of the Second Cold War Observatory, a global collective of scholars committed to understanding how geopolitical and geoeconomic competition influences and is influenced by societies, economies, and ecologies worldwide.
This original podcast series is available on Spotify, Apple, and Buzzsprout.
www.secondcoldwarobservatory.com -
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When the U.S. government and state of Florida unveiled a new plan to save the Everglades in 2000, the sprawling blueprint to restore the wetlands became the largest hydrological restoration effort in the nation's history. Two decades later, only one project is complete, and the Everglades is still dying. Bright Lit Place heads into the swamp to meet its first inhabitants, the scientists who study it and the warring sides struggling to find a way out of the muck.
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