Delaware River Watershed Racial Justice Resource Hub

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Podcasts

Launched in 2013 as a blog series, is now a podcast that contextualizes modern media coverage, race, and culture.
(Racial Justice)
“The black feminist podcast of your dreams,” with Roxane Gay and Tressie McMillan Cottom
(Racial Justice)
Erika Hart's podcast: If you're looking for a powerful narrative that documents "Black queer love ethics," this is it.
(Racial Justice) (LGBTQ Justice)
A podcast to delve into the practices we need as a community, to move through endings, and to come out whole on the other side.
(Identity and Community)
Podcast hosts Ikhlas Saleem and Makkah Ali break down binary modes of thinking while exploring how to reclaim one’s spiritual practices, authenticity, and perspectives on pop culture.
(Identity and Community)
Kimberlé Crenshaw speaks with incredible candor rooted in her own academic and professional research.
Her work simultaneously sheds light on and rejects America’s tendency to isolate issues of racial oppression.
(Intersectionality) (Racial Justice)
Emmy Award-winning journalist and Webby Award winner Jemele Hill shares her nuanced opinions on news, pop culture, politics, and sports.
She also conducts intimate interviews with some of the biggest names and most thought-provoking contributors to culture, music, and entertainment.
(Identity and Community)
A podcast for criminal justice enthusiasts striving to situate mass incarceration in a larger historical context,
Justice in America both breaks down buzzwords and shares useful terminology for self-education.
Listen for vital ways to unpack the social and political systems that exist in America today.
(Racial Justice)
My Colorful Nana (MCN) is a tool to understand the unique, systemic and historical oppression on Black women's hair.
Guests speak on the concept of "cultural identity" in relation to the greater issues surrounding American society such as white supremacy, identity politics and queer ethics.
(Racial Justice)
This podcast was created for those wanting to effect change, who understand the importance of restoring our democracy, and who want to engage in deep conversation around the issues.
(Racial Justice)