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Podcasts

This six-part audio series produced by The New York Times studies the 400th anniversary of American slavery.
(Racial Justice)
The hosts are often compared to two best friends gossiping playfully at a dinner party, each finding legitimate ways to process the pleasurable and painful tropes of individual authenticity as Black Americans.
Listen to them analyze TV, movies, art, music, and the internet in a way that anyone can not only understand, but thoroughly enjoy.
(Identity and Community)
Jaison Gardner and Dr. Kaila Story talk race, gender, and LGBTQ+ issues, from politics to pop culture.
(Identity and Community) (Racial Justice)
This podcast is about the small moments that define who we are and who we are not.
The stories are universal.
The voices are all Muslim. With a new episode every weekday this Ramadan, host Misha Euceph opens a window into the lives of Tan France, Alia Shawkat, Ramy Youssef, Reza Aslan, Mercedes Iman Diamond and others.
(Religious Diversity) (Intersectionality)
Promoting "diversity" is often something corporations and universities strive to check-off their long to-do lists.
But what does that actually mean in practice?
(Organizational Culture)
A Kansas-city specific podcast, The Filter takes a deep dive into the under-reported stories of their community and the cultural weight of being on the margins.
The topics they discuss range from the stigma of Black women wearing their hair naturally, to loneliness in COVID-19, and ways to cope with emotional stress.
(Identity and Community) (Racial Justice)
The author of Me and White Supremacy shares her perspective as a Black Muslim woman on Good Ancestor Podcast.
Layla Saad is creating a legacy of healing and change that will impact the future of Black culture. She repeatedly asks her listeners, “How can I become a good ancestor?”
Through her podcast, Saad lists resourceful ways to nurture good ancestorship while studying the intersectionality of race and womanhood.
(Racial Justice) (Intersectionality)
Tune in to a vulnerable exchange between two men of color and conversations regarding performative outrage, Black trans organizing, and the thought behind abolishing the prison industrial complex.
Hosts Delency Parham and Black Simons say this podcast is a chance to understand political advocacy from "outside of the academy, meaning working through grassroots organization, not within the existing political system.
(Racial Justice) (LGBTQ Justice)
This podcast is based on senior associate dean for academic affairs Brian Lowery’s course, Leadership for Society, which explores topics at the intersection of business and society through broad discussions about the most urgent challenges the world faces — including broadening inequalities, a worldwide pandemic, racial inequities, and more.
(Identity and Community) (Organizational Culture)
Tune into stories spanning across the Black diaspora, directly reported by two professional journalists.
(Racial Justice)