192 episodes

Disruptions are all around us. Some spark joy and possibility. Others move us to take action and re-evaluate our world. Every week on Disrupted, host and political scientist Khalilah Brown-Dean unpacks how big and small disruptions are shaping our lives.

From technology, economics, education, and healthcare to navigating our way through a global pandemic, continued racial inequalities, geopolitical upheaval, and climate change. What can history teach us about the current moment? What can we learn as we prepare for the disruptions yet to come? Who are the people using their voice to reset, reenergize, and create change? What are we learning about ourselves and our society to help us move forward?

Disrupted Connecticut Public

    • News
    • 4.8 • 20 Ratings

Disruptions are all around us. Some spark joy and possibility. Others move us to take action and re-evaluate our world. Every week on Disrupted, host and political scientist Khalilah Brown-Dean unpacks how big and small disruptions are shaping our lives.

From technology, economics, education, and healthcare to navigating our way through a global pandemic, continued racial inequalities, geopolitical upheaval, and climate change. What can history teach us about the current moment? What can we learn as we prepare for the disruptions yet to come? Who are the people using their voice to reset, reenergize, and create change? What are we learning about ourselves and our society to help us move forward?

    Friendships that challenge norms: Intergenerational friends and platonic life partners

    Friendships that challenge norms: Intergenerational friends and platonic life partners

    This hour, we are taking a look at friendship. While friends seem ubiquitous in our culture, they aren't often prioritized in the same way that romantic partners are. Rhaina Cohen discusses that topic in her new book 'The Other Significant Others: Reimagining Life with Friendship at the Center.' Then, we turn to the idea of having friends from different generations. We'll hear from two Quinnipiac University students who spent their first year of grad school living with the residents of Pond Ridge at Ashlar Village, a retirement community in Wallingford, CT. And Eunice Lin Nichols, Co-CEO of CoGenerate, will explain the value of intergenerational connections, including how they can help in a polarized society.

    GUESTS:



    Rhaina Cohen: Producer and editor for NPR. Author of 'The Other Significant Others: Reimagining Life with Friendship at the Center'



    Elise Maiorano: grad student at Quinnipiac University studying occupational therapy. Elise spent her first year of grad school living at Pond Ridge at Ashlar Village, a retirement community



    Annemarie Allen: grad student at Quinnipiac University studying occupational therapy. Annemarie spent her first year of grad school living at Pond Ridge at Ashlar Village, a retirement community



    Ben Paige: Resident of Pond Ridge at Ashlar Village



    Eunice Lin Nichols: Co-CEO of CoGenerate, an organization that brings people from different generations together to solve problems



    This episode originally aired on February 14, 2024.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 49 min
    Immigration policies that have shaped the U.S. from 1924 to 2024

    Immigration policies that have shaped the U.S. from 1924 to 2024

    Both Democrats and Republicans are hoping immigration policy will win them votes in 2024. This hour, we take a look at immigration laws from the past and present. Atlantic Staff Writer and 2023 Pulitzer Prize-winner Caitlin Dickerson talks about Biden and Trump's records on immigration and tells us who is immigrating to the U.S. today. We also hear from a group that supports immigrants through community organizing in Bridgeport and Hartford, and we learn about a restrictive immigration act that was signed 100 years ago.

    GUESTS:



    Caitlin Dickerson: Staff Writer for The Atlantic. In 2023 she won a Pulitzer Prize for her work on the U.S. policy of separating migrant children from their families.



    Barbara López: Director of Make the Road Connecticut



    Mae Ngai: Lung Family Professor of Asian American Studies and Professor of History at Columbia University. Her most recent book is The Chinese Question: The Gold Rushes and Global Politics.



    For more on the history of U.S. immigration policy, you can listen to our episode on Chinese American exclusion and resistance.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 49 min
    BIPOC voters face difficult questions and barriers to access in 2024

    BIPOC voters face difficult questions and barriers to access in 2024

    As election day steadily approaches, we hear two conversations about voting. Back in March, Khalilah hosted a live event with MSNBC Legal Analyst Charles Coleman Jr. We take a listen to that event and learn how Black voters can make a difference in their communities. The discussion was part of The Legacy Foundation of Hartford's Black Excellence Speaker Series.

    Then, Jacqueline De León, Senior Attorney with the Native American Rights Fund, talks about a 2020 report on barriers to voting access that Native Americans face and how those could impact the 2024 elections.

    GUESTS:



    Charles Coleman Jr.: MSNBC Legal Analyst, Civil Rights Attorney and Co-Host of 'Black Men in America: Road to 2024,' which aired on MSNBC in February



    Jacqueline De León: Senior Attorney with the Native American Rights Fund and co-author of the report Obstacles at Every Turn: Barriers to Political Participation Faced by Native American Voters. She is an enrolled member of the Isleta Pueblo.


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 49 min
    Education inequities still exist 70 years after Brown v. Board

    Education inequities still exist 70 years after Brown v. Board

    Seventy years ago, Brown v. Board of Education outlawed racial segregation in public schools. This hour, we look at the historic Supreme Court decision — and some of the inequities that still exist in education today.

    We speak with the Executive Director of a youth development organization in Hartford working to close education opportunity gaps.

    And later, we talk about the legacy of Ellen Peters, the first woman appointed Chief Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court. She wrote the opinion in Sheff v. O’Neill, a landmark school desegregation case here in Connecticut.

     

    GUESTS:

    Kathy Trusty: Independent historian and children’s author.

    Andrea Williams: Executive Director, ConnectiKids.

    Chief Justice Richard A. Robinson: Chief Justice, Connecticut Supreme Court.

    Richard Palmer: Former Connecticut Supreme Court Justice, Chairman of the state Public Defender Services Commission.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 49 min
    Libraries are building community through identity and cultural change

    Libraries are building community through identity and cultural change

    Many people think of libraries as quiet places to study, work or read a book. But the quiet rooms of libraries have also been centers of social change. This hour, we look at how libraries help people build community and explore their identities. First, we talk about a recent drag story hour in Enfield, CT that was successfully rescheduled after it had initially been canceled due to safety concerns. Then, we discuss a pioneering librarian who helped start New York's well-known Morgan Library & Museum while keeping her racial identity a secret.

    GUESTS:



    Lil Miss Hot Mess: Board member with Drag Story Hour, a nonprofit that organizes events where drag performers read to kids. She is also a University Professor and children’s author whose books include 'The Hips on the Drag Queen Go Swish, Swish, Swish'



    The Reverend Dr. Greg Gray: President of Enfield Pride and Pastor of Enfield United Church of Christ



    Erica Ciallela: Exhibition Project Curator at the Morgan Library


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 49 min
    Debates over the 1st Amendment on college campuses

    Debates over the 1st Amendment on college campuses

    This hour on Disrupted, we’re looking at the First Amendment and its impact on colleges and universities.

    Students are demanding their schools divest from Israel over its war in Gaza. Some colleges have allowed protests with police presence, while others have forcibly removed demonstrators. There have been allegations of antisemitic, anti-Muslim, and anti-Palestinian speech at some protests — and that’s left many wondering how to address harmful speech without curbing free expression.

    First Amendment Specialist Kevin Goldberg explains the five protections covered in the amendment. Wesleyan University President Michael Roth talks about his role as a university administrator and how to provide safe spaces for students.

    GUESTS:



    Kevin Goldberg: First Amendment Specialist, Freedom Forum.



    Michael Roth: President, Wesleyan University and author of Safe Enough Spaces: A Pragmatist’s Approach to Inclusion, Free Speech, and Political Correctness.



    This episode originally aired on February 7, 2024.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 43 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
20 Ratings

20 Ratings

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