Speak Out with Tim Wise
Tim Wise, known for his book White Like Me, hosts this podcast, with topics focusing on democracy, justice, religious tolerance, education, politics and more.
Recommended by Nehemiah: Center for Urban Leadership Development
Tim Wise, known for his book White Like Me, hosts this podcast, with topics focusing on democracy, justice, religious tolerance, education, politics and more.
Recommended by Nehemiah: Center for Urban Leadership Development
All My Relations is a podcast to discuss our relationships as Native peoples-- relationships to land, to ancestors, and to each other.
Recommended by the YWCA Racial Justice Learning Resources
Madison-based pastor Dr. Alex Gee has had over thirty years' experience working for racial justice through such organizations as the Fountain of Life Covenant Church, The Nehemiah Center for Urban Leadership Development and the citywide movement Justified Anger. His podcast Black Like Me 'invites you to experience the world through the perspective of one Black man, one conversation, one story, or even one rant at a time.'
In 1619, the first ship carrying enslaved Africans arrived in Viriginia. Four hundred years later, the New York Times examines the repercussions of that moment.
Recommended by the YWCA as part of their Racial Justice Learning Resources
Sometimes irreverent, but always providing smart analysis of events and culture, Latino Rebels Radio gives its unique spin on the world of US Latinos.
NPR's Latino USA covers news, politics, the arts and business with a Latino focus.
Heben Nigatu (The Late Show With Stephen Colbert) and Tracy Clayton (BuzzFeed) cover everything from race to politics to culture with frank insight and sharp wit. Past interviewees for the show have included Hillary Clinton, Lena Dunham, Ta-Nehisi Coats and Queen Latifah.
NPR's Code Switch considers how race, ethnicity and culture affect lives and communities, and how these factors are changing.
Recommended by the YWCA as part of their Racial Justice Learning Resources
"Authors Baratunde Thurston (How To Be Black), Raquel Cepeda (Bird Of Paradise: How I Became Latina) and Tanner Colby (Some Of My Best Friends Are Black) host a lively multiracial, interracial conversation about the ways we can’t talk, don’t talk, would rather not talk, but intermittently, fitfully, embarrassingly do talk about culture, identity, politics, power, and privilege in our pre-post-yet-still-very-racial America."