
Talk Policy To Me
Talk Policy To Me explores public policy through the stories of young activists, advocates, and policymakers. Each episode highlights a young person's experience and how they are making a positive impact in their community. The podcast is produced by the Goldman School of Public Policy and the Berkeley Institute for Young Americans.
Episodes
The Kids Behind KOSA
This is the story of one young person's battle to transform tech policy for teens. Because while young people struggle with mental health on social media, big tech companies are profiting off their screen time. In this episode, meet Zamaan Qureshi, who got involved in tech policy as a teenager himself. Host Anjali Nambiar shares Zamaan's journey from advocacy on the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) t
Treno's Community Land Trust
Home. It's one of those ideas that is core to us. But what if your home was gentrifying — becoming less affordable and recognizable with each day? This episode tells the story of Treno Morton, a young person who has set off to safeguard home not just for himself, but for his historic Black community displaced by systemic racism. Learn how he became one of the youngest leaders championing community
There's Something in the Water
Two recent college grads trying to address contaminated water in an isolated town. But what can two young people really do to help solve a 20-year-old problem embedded deep in the ground — and in local politics? We're exploring water justice and public policy in California's Central Valley and roadblocks on the state's path to achieving the Human Right to Water. This episode is hosted by Sunny Sin
Rose, Rising
This is the origin story of a teen climate activist who made it to the White House. Host Ava Kargosha shares the journey of former youth climate activist Rose Strauss, who made headlines for confronting a state senator about the oil money lurking behind his climate change denial. Listen in to learn how Rose went from student activist to full-time climate policy-maker by the age of 24. Transcript:
Don't be a WebQoof
This episode takes us to India, where fake news on Whatsapp spreads like wildfire. Is addressing it a hopeless cause? Learn about solutions with Abhishek Anand, a Gen Z journalist who joined a Deli-based fact-checking team. Listen to discover the team's techniques for battling an endless flow of falsehoods and how their efforts protect someone from becoming a "webqoof". Hosted by Anjali Nambiar.
Farming Dreams
A bare plot of land. An innovative farming technique. And seemingly insurmountable challenges. This is the story of a 22-year-old farmer who crosses the country to help a small community facing food insecurity. Shamik Chandrachood moves from Kentucky to California to bring a technique called intercropping to a traditional farming town — and encounters unexpected roadblocks along the way. Hosted by
Pushing the (Age) Limits
Emily Nguyen started working in the government as a teenager. Can teenagers get taken seriously in San Francisco City Hall? And why does it matter that youth like Emily participate in civics? Welcome to the first episode of Season 6, a story about the joys, surprises, and struggles of being young in local government. This episode hosted by Avalon Bauman features a conversation with Berkeley Instit
Trailer: Season Six
A new season of Talk Policy to Me is launching soon. Transcript: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/trailer-season-six
Professor Robert B. Reich speaks at Goldman School commencement
Professor Robert B. Reich was voted by the graduating students of UC Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy to be their faculty speaker. Always a beloved teacher, this occasion was especially meaningful because it marked Professor Reich's retirement from teaching. Robert Reich was introduced by Master of Public Policy student speaker Abraham Eli Bedoy. See show notes and full transcript here:
TN Rep Justin Jones speaks at Goldman School commencement
Tennessee Representative Justin Jones addressed the graduates at the Goldman School of Public Policy's commencement on May 14, 2023. Representative Jones came into the national spotlight when he was expelled from the Tennessee legislature for taking to the assembly floor to protest gun violence and the refusal of the legislature to take up this issue. See show notes and full transcript here: htt
Episode 512: Talking Agriculture, Drought, and Resilience
This year, researchers found that the last 22 years were the driest consecutive years in the North American southwest in over a millennium. The pace and scale of climate change is forcing states and counties to adapt rapidly. In California, one of the industries at the forefront of the adaptation predicament is agriculture. In today's episode, reporter Elena Neale-Sacks speaks with resilienc
Episode 511: Talking the Rise of Anti-LGBTQ Legislation
The annual number of anti-LGBTQ bills filed has skyrocketed over the past several years, from 41 in 2018 to 240 and counting in the first three months of this year. Half of these bills are targeting transgender people specifically. At the same time, surveys of the general public show over 70% say they support same-sex marriage and laws preventing discrimination across the LGBTQ community. An
Episode 510: Talking Social Equity Cannabis
Show Notes In 2016, California voters legalized recreational cannabis through Prop 64. Now, five years after legalization, city's are grappling with the difficulty of prioritizing social equity in the cannabis licensing process for Black, brown, and formerly incarcerated small business owners who were negatively impacted by the war on drugs. In this episode, Talk Policy to Me Reporter Noah C
Episode 509: Talking Race-Class Fusion
The Republican Party and the Democratic Party take different approaches to talking about race and racism. While politicians in the Republican Party have used coded language or "dog whistles" to stoke racial division, politicians in the Democratic Party either avoid talking about race in favor of talking about class issues or talk about race as a matter of white over nonwhite conflict. Each o
Episode 508: Talking a Voting Overhaul, Part 2
This is the second episode in a two-part series about changing how we vote in the United States. In today's episode, Talk Policy To Me reporter Elena Neale-Sacks talks with voting systems researchers Sara Wolk and Clay Shentrup about what they think the order of operations should be to get to a place where everyone can vote their conscience and votes accurately translate into who ends up in
Episode 507: Talking a Voting Overhaul, Part 1
In recent months and years, legislation meant to make it more difficult to vote, especially for Black and brown people, has proliferated in some state legislatures. But problems with the way we vote in the United States go deeper than these laws. In Part 1 of this two-part episode, Talk Policy To Me reporter Elena Neale-Sacks talks to GSPP researcher Charlotte Hill about what it would look l
Episode 506: Talking Dating in a Digital World
As of 2021, there were 30 million online dating users in the US and 321 million users worldwide. Despite this massive number of users, there's very little policy that regulates how users behave on these platforms. Studies show that a majority of women have experienced sexual harassment online and that rarely is any action taken by law enforcement in situations where technology is being used
Episode 505: Talking Fair Chance Housing
In February 2020, the Oakland City Council passed Oakland's Fair Chance Housing ordinance. The legislation was the first in California — joining cities nationwide like Seattle and Portland — to ensure that people returning home from the criminal justice system can legally live with family members and access, on their own, nearly all other forms of previously off-limits rental housing. In thi
Episode 504: Talking Vaccine Deniers
With 59% of the US population fully vaccinated against COVID-19, the increased availability of booster shots, and the rise of a new variant, having a highly vaccinated public is incredibly important to the fight against COVID in the months ahead. In this episode, Talk Policy to Me reporter Noah Cole talks to psychologist and behavioral scientist Philipp Schmid and public health expert a
Episode 503: Talking Oakland A's—Will they still or will they go?
The A's proposal for a new waterfront baseball stadium at Oakland's Howard Terminal is a multi-use development site that would include shops, parks, and housing. As the City of Oakland and Alameda County negotiate with the A's over how these benefits are paid for, much has been made about the impact that sports stadiums have on communities. In this episode, reporter Noah Cole speaks with
Episode 502: Talking Trade-offs and the Electric Grid
As Congress struggles to pass a spending bill that includes some of the biggest climate legislation the U.S. has seen, there's another big hurdle the country needs to clear to make big moves on climate change —the electric grid. In this episode, reporter Elena Neale-Sacks talks to energy policy expert Steve Weissman, environmental scientist Grace Wu, and energy equity researcher Daniel Ra
Episode 501: Talking "Your Neighbor, the Bounty Hunter"
Today's episode explores the new wave of "rights suppressing laws" with New York Times Op-Ed writers and legal scholars Jon Michaels and David Noll. Reference: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/04/opinion/texas-abortion-law.html See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-501-talking-your-neighbor-the-bounty-hunter
Season 5 Trailer
Season 5 of Talk Policy To Me is dropping soon, with new hosts Noah Cole and Amy Benziger. Listen and subscribe! See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/season-5-trailer
Episode 415: Talking with David C. Wilson
In this final episode of TPTM Season 4, we say goodbye to hosts Reem and Colleen and hello to the incoming Dean of the Goldman School of Public Policy, Dr. David C. Wilson. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-415-talking-with-david-c-wilson
Episode 414: Talking Lies Your High School Econ Teacher Told You
Cash transfers discourage work, price ceilings and floors (like the minimum wage) are economically inefficient, and trade makes everyone better off. If you've ever taken a basic economics course in high school or even in college, these were probably the major takeaways. But these are myths --dire oversimplifications at best, and outright inaccuracies at worst --that often represent the most
Episode 413: Talking Black Police Unions
CONTENT WARNING: This episode involves mention of police violence against people of color. Since the 1970s, Black police officers have formed informal unions in response to racism within their departments and in the greater community. In this episode, reporter Elena Neale-Sacks talks to an economist, a law professor, and a former president of a Black police union to better understand the pur
Episode 412: Talking Public Spaces
As vaccine rates rise and health experts give more public activities the stamp of approval, people have begun shifting from private spaces to public ones. Today, we're talking about what public spaces are and the policies that govern them. We'll also talk about the unhoused folks for whom the distinction between public and private space is less clear. Archival audio from YouTube user Saul R
Episode 411: Talking philanthropy—yesterday, today, and tomorrow
On this episode of TPTM, we're talking philanthropy yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Since the Gilded Age, philanthropists have positioned themselves as gracious, charitable forces in society who are experts in identifying and solving our social ails. But the institution of philanthropy has had its critics from day one. What are the origins of modern philanthropy in the US, and how did they lea
Episode 410: Tok Policy To Me—Youth Political Mobilization through TikTok
With over 100 million users and counting in the US, TikTok is beginning to play a major role in the political education and mobilization of its young user base. In this episode, which was written and recorded in the aftermath of the November 2020 election, Talk Policy to Me reporter Noah Cole spoke with Aidan Kohn-Murphy and Toni Akande, two of the teens who run the "Gen Z for Change" TikTok
Episode 409: Talking Anarchism and Direct Action
Last summer, as a part of the public reckoning with racialized police violence, chants and mantras like "Whose Streets? Our Streets" and "We Keep Us Safe" and "We Are The Change We've Been Waiting For" resounded in the streets and all over social media. What would it mean to take these slogans seriously? To actually imbue people and communities -- rather than political representatives and
Episode 408: Talking Black History Month 2021
Black History Month 2021 has been an eventful occasion at the Goldman School of Public Policy. One student organization, Black Students in Public Policy (BiPP) has been responsible for putting together a weekly speaker series on health and wellness, economic policy, politics, and social impact in the Black community. In this episode of Talk Policy To Me, we hear from 7 students in BiPP who
Episode 407: Talking the U.S. Senate—Is It Still Relevant?
The highly contentious Georgia Senate elections are right around the corner. The results will determine which party holds a Senate majority for the next two years. In this episode, we take a step back and examine the Senate as an institution in the current political context of hyperpolarization. Is it still functional as a mechanism of effective government? Maybe. Or, maybe not. To help make
Episode 406: Talking Urban Agriculture & Food Policy
During the holiday season, food is often central to the celebration. But during the COVID-19 pandemic, more and more people are experiencing hunger for the first time, and food insecurity has become a daily reality for many. Today, we're talking about what some say is a practical solution to rising hunger—urban agriculture and the policies that shape and support it. If you live in the Bay Ar
Episode 405: Talking The Future of Community Engagement
When shelter-in-place orders were mandated in cities across the US, city employees sprang into action to facilitate the transition. Day-to-day government happenings were instantly and radically transformed, but one thing that cities still needed to do? Community engagement. In the face of orders for folks to stay home and social distance, cities faced a reality where they needed to quickly a
Episode 404: Talking Ballot Access & The Green Party
Nothing in the US Constitution mandates or guarantees a two-party political system. Yet Americans are accustomed to understanding the political landscape as a binary of Democrats and Republicans; third parties are rarely taken seriously, particularly on the national scale. Members and candidates of political third parties, like the Green Party, argue that this is bad for democracy. With a
Episode 403: Talking Prop 22, App-Based Drivers, and Labor
On November 3rd, California voters will decide on Proposition 22. The Proposition aims to allow app-based drivers to maintain their status as Independent Contractors by carving out a special exception to Assembly Bill 5. We talk to Goldman Alumna Rebecca Stack-Martinez and the Chair of the UC Berkeley Labor Center Ken Jacobs about the implications of Prop 22 on labor and the influence of mo
Episode 402: Talking Election Coverage
Talking: Election coverage—where's the policy? Hourly breaking news. An endless stream of push notifications. A backlog of political podcasts (but not this one, right?). Today we're talking about how the news media covers elections, and how voters can find real information within the sea of coverage in the final weeks before the election. See show notes and full transcript here: https:
Episode 401: Talking Election Media Diets
Welcome to Season 4 of Talk Policy to Me! It's been a whirlwind of policy news and happenings since you last heard from us (to say the least) and there's a lot to catch up on. While we work hard on new episodes, we thought we'd pop into your feeds for a brief moment to introduce a few new members of the TPTM team and take a moment to ask one another: What media resources are you looking t
Episode 320: Talking Young Voters
The brutal murder of George Floyd by four Minneapolis Police Department officers, and the failure of the justice system to quickly prosecute the police officers involved, has triggered an explosion of activism across the country, and the world, in loud protest of police brutality against Black people. These actions vary dramatically along spectrums of intended impact and severity. And the response
Episode 319: Talking Identity, the Census, and How We're All Counted
The 2020 Census launched April 1st, 2020. With it comes yet another time where individuals have to distill their identities into check boxes with limited options. In this episode, we're exploring how the race/ethnicity category options were created and how those available choices impact policy. Host Sarah Edwards talks with Cristina Mora, Associate Director of Sociology and Co-Director of the Inst
Episode 318: Talking Democracy in the Era of COVID-19
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought America to a screeching standstill, with most non-essential businesses shutting down, events being cancelled and postponed, school systems going virtual, and skyrocketing unemployment. And on top of it all, we're technically in the midst of an election season, which has also been severely disrupted by the shelter-in-place measures implemented across the country.
Episode 317: Talking COVID-19, Racial Inequality, and Economic Impacts
Continuing with our effort to cover the COVID-19 pandemic and related policy issues, Sarah Edwards (MPP '20) speaks with Ellora Derenoncourt, who will join the Goldman Faculty in the fall. Tune in to the conversation unpacking the issues of racial inequality in health and economics and learn from Ellora's historic economics perspective. For more on Ellora's work, visit her website. Check out the "
Episode 316: Talking 16-Year-Olds and Voting
In discussions around expanding voter turnout, many different policy interventions come up—same day voter registration, automatic voter registration, making Election day a holiday. But what if the best way to change the likelihood of people voting actually came in changing their first voting experience? There's a body of evidence that shows that voting for the first time at 16, rather than 18, inc
Episode 315: Talking COVID-19 and Racial Inequity
As the numbers are coming in, statistics show that communities of color, particularly Latinx and Black communities are both contracting COVID at higher rates and dying from it at higher rates. What is causing this inequity? What solutions can we enact, both now and in the future, to change this? Sarah Edwards (MPP '20) spoke with Rashawn Ray, David M. Rubenstein fellow at the Brookings Institution
Episode 314: Talking Elections and Voting Systems
Welcome to the first episode in TPTM's brand new series on Democracy! Do you ever wonder why our voting and election systems work the way they do? Has anyone ever preached to you the virtues (or evils) of rank choice voting, blockchain, or eliminating the electoral college? Then tune in to the lastest TPTM episode where Colleen (MPP '21) sits down with elections-policy experts and fellow Goldman s
Episode 313: COVID-19 Roundtable
We are nearly one month into California's shelter-in-place order in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. And it looks like, in the Bay Area at least, we're seeing some payoff from our early efforts to socially distance; hospitals have not seen the number of patients initially expected, and public health experts are tentatively declaring our success in flattening the proverbial curve. In spite of th
Episode 312: Talking Demography (Wrap Up!)
To wrap-up our series on Demography Shifts, Colleen (MPP '21) sat down with Goldman School Visiting Assistant Professor Mia Bird, who started as an MPP student at GSPP before pursuing an MA in economic demography (and then returning again to GSPP as a PhD!). Professor Bird discusses the different approaches that demographers and policymakers might take toward demographic shifts, shares her perspec
Episode 311: Talking Educator Equity
More than half of the student population in U.S. public schools identify as students of color; yet less than one in five—18 percent— of the teacher workforce identify as teachers of color. Does diversity and inclusion in the teaching profession even matter? And, if so, how can public policy play a constructive role? To find answers to these questions, Khalid Kaldi (MPP '21) sat down with two forme
Episode 310: Talking Aging and Transportation
We know from research—and from personal experience with our own elders—that mobility and independence are key components of mental and emotional wellness for the over 65, or senior, population. However, once they're no longer able to drive their cars due to health and safety concerns, that mobility—or ease of getting from point A to point B—plummets. A senior who no longer drives may be supported
Episode 309: Talking Aging and Labor
As our population ages, we are faced with a number of policy challenges. One, in particular, stands out: how will we provide care for those who need help? Our next episode in the series around Demographic Shifts explores the policy implications of the aging population and the people who will help care for them. California expects to see its population of seniors rise from 15 to 25% in the next 40
Episode 308: Talking Fertility
When news articles talk about the county's declining fertility, there tends to be a tone of panic and often of judgment. But what is the truth of fertility rate declines? What role does policy play in impacting these rates? And how does the nature of fertility rates influence policy? In this episode, Sarah Edwards (MPP 20) turns to a local expert, demography PhD Leslie Root. Leslie helps us unpack
Episode 307: Talking Demography
It's 2020 and Talk Policy to Me is back with a brand new series on Demographic Shifts. Over the next few episodes, we'll dive into some of the most pressing demographic shifts taking place here in California, and discuss what their implications are for policymaking both here in California and across the country. In this short kickoff episode, hosts Colleen (MPP '21) and Sarah (MPP '20) ground us i
Episode 306: Holiday Roundtable!
Grab a warm drink and cozy up under your favorite blanket, listeners! In Talk Policy To Me's final episode of 2019, we got all five hosts in one room to talk about... talking policy during the holidays. Join our hosts Reem, Khalid, Colleen, Spencer, and Sarah as they explore how policy gets personal during the holidays when we gather with family and friends, reckon with hometown and childhood memo
Episode 305: Talking Anti-Racist Transportation Policy
We're not used to thinking about transportation as a raced policy area. But, like all other policy areas, transportation policy has the potential to improve racial equity or widen racial disparities. But writer and historian Dr. Ibram X. Kendi asserts that all ideas, actions, and policies are either racist or anti-racist, removing the gray area of so-called 'race neutrality' in his recently publis
Episode 304: Talking Tax Justice
Who benefits most from the tax system? What did the Trump tax cuts achieve? How do taxes affect inequality? What's the relationship between taxes and democracy? Tax policy seems like it was designed by, of, and for the rich. But, as our guest today Gabriel Zucman points out, the U.S. tax code was once a vastly different beast. Zucman is an associate professor of economics at UC Berkeley, director
Episode 303: Talking Human-Centered Design
What options do we have in our toolkit as policymakers when it comes to policy design? Are the tools government typically chooses to wield the most effective ones? If not, how can we get government to invest in a new approach to policy design? In episode three of our series on policy design and implementation, Colleen Pulawski (MPP '21) speaks with Brandon Greene of the Oakland Civic Design Lab an
Episode 302: Talking School Integration
Talking School Integration Was school integration a "failed experiment"? Is the impact of policy limited when it comes to education? In this episode, Goldman Professor Rucker Johnson debunks the myths around school integration and shares the insights from his new book, Children of the Dream: Why School Integration Works. In this second episode of our series on Policy Design and Implement
Episode 301: Talking Policy Design
What do Healthcare.gov, police officer recruitment, and 911 call centers have in common? All can be improved through smart policy design tweaks! In this episode, Goldman Professor Elizabeth Linos and TPTM host Spencer Bowen (MPP '20) discuss how small changes in policy design can result in big differences in impact. The first in our ongoing series on Policy Design and Implementation, this episode
Coming Soon! A new season of Talk Policy to Me
The Talk Policy to Me team is back for Season 3! This season, our three hosts from last year(Spencer, Reem, and Sarah) are joined by two new hosts, Colleen and Khalid. Host Spencer Bowen (MPP 2020) leads a conversation with the team about how policies we take for granted were once policy choices. Hear from all five hosts as to what "status quo" policies they can't let go of. See show notes and ful
Episode 216: Talking Basic Needs
It's often assumed that a college student living on ramen or going to events for free pizza is just part of the experience of being a "starving student." But the data show a much grimmer reality: 56% of college students nationally have experienced housing insecurity and 40% of students at UC Berkeley are food insecure. How can this issue be tackled when the narrative downplays the depth of the pro
Episode 215: Talking Public Goods
Parks. Freeways. Street lamps. You might not group those together, but they're all public goods – the goods and services that prop up a functioning society. They're also things that our market-based economy doesn't supply in the right places and right amounts without some thoughtful public policy. Spencer Bowen (MPP '20) sat down with his fellow MPP candidate Eric Harris Bernstein to talk about pu
Episode 214: Talking Weed Policy
Jaunary 2019 marked the one-year anniversary of the legalization of recreational cannabis use in California, and the launch of the Cannabis Research Center at UC Berkeley. Sarah Edwards (MPP '20) sat down with Michael Polson, researcher and anthropologist, to discuss the impact of legalization on the growers and on the rural communities whose economies often center on cannabis cultivation. Tune in
Episode 213: Talking Carbon Footprinting, Part 2
In Part 2 of our 2-episode carbon footprint series, TPTM hosts Reem, Spencer, and Sarah reflect on the results of their two-week-long challenge to drastically reduce their personal carbon emissions through changes to their diets, commutes, consumption habits, and electricity use. But do individual emissions reductions matter when corporations and industries continue to pollute with impunity? We ca
Special Edition Episode: Talking about Talking Policy
For this special edition episode, hosts Reem, Spencer, and Sarah talk about what it means to "talk policy." How do they explain policy and policy school? Why do they think that it is important to talk about policy? Our three hosts are first-year students at the Goldman School of Public Policy's Master in Public Policy Program. They each bring different perspectives and background to the master's
Episode 212: Talking Carbon Footprinting
1.5 degrees Celsius. According to a special 2018 report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, that's the maximum global temperature increase allowable before we see catastrophic impacts on food security, ecosystems, water access, frequency and extremity of weather events, and more. The report warns global leaders and policymakers that failing to limit the Earth's temperature inc
Episode 211: Talking UBI, part 3
How can we fix the stigma around welfare? Welfare is deeply politicized and often stigmatized. Social support programs are strongly centered around beneficiaries working. Has it always been this way? Are we destined to be stuck with these political perspectives? In today's episode, UC Berkeley MPP student Sarah Edwards wraps up the three-part series around Universal Basic Income and the Social Saf
Episode 210: Talking the CA Housing Crisis
NIMBYism, geographical limitation, and weaponized policies have led the state to the biggest housing crisis in state history. Can state-level policies fix a very local problem? California housing is an undeniable problem. Rents are too high and there is not enough housing for those who need it in the places they want it. But how did we get here? Why has the development of solutions shifted from
Episode 209: Talking Title IX
UC Berkeley will spend $30 million on building new softball and beach volleyball teams. While Title IX is widely understood to be a sports equity law, its historical advancement of feminist interests and its application at Cal today reveal a more ambitious and inclusive agenda. Not merely a mechanism for intercollegiate sports, Title IX advocates for building holistic inclusive collegiate experien
Episode 208: Talking UBI, part 2
In our last episode on universal basic income, or UBI, a conversation between UC Berkeley MPP '20 student Sarah Edwards and Economics and Public Policy Professor Hilary Hoynes revealed that the landscape for UBI proposals and experiments is ripe. In this episode, Goldman School student Sarah Edwards interviews Lori Ospina, about Stockton's guaranteed income program, Stockton Economic Empowerment D
Episode 207: Talking UBI, part 1
Professor of Economics Hilary Hoynes and UC Berkeley MPP Student '20 Sarah Edwards probe whether work is a solid foundation on which to build the welfare of American society. Can and should income from working really provide a stable base for all Americans? And can more universal coverage social safety nets for non-working adults alleviate the stigma of government support? While welfare reform of
Episode 206: Talking Dockless Scooters
Streets littered with bicycles and scooters represent the latest skirmish between Bay Area city administrators and the technology sector. In a region ready to confront carbon emissions and ready to embrace pedestrian-friendly streets, scooters have become the next item in an evergreen local debate on what mode of transport should dominant city streets, who should decide, and how to keep city resid
Episode 205: Talking Housing Re-segregation
As rents continue to skyrocket in the Bay Area, housing displacement is disproportionately affecting people of color. A "geography of racialized inequality" has long been set in the region -- but today's segregation is taking a new configuration as new housing market preferences take root. 80 percent of neighborhoods in the East Bay experiencing gentrification were previously redlined, according t
Episode 204: Talking Elections
Young voter turnout is lower than overall voter turnout. But, as we approach the 2018 midterm elections, UC Berkeley public policy student Sarah Edwards speaks with Buffy Wicks, Sarah Anzia, and others to find that there are reasons to be optimistic about young voter engagement: Millennials are opinion leaders -- and have helped transform the social, cultural and political landscape in the last d
Episode 203: Talking Food Policy
Food surrounds us -- and yet we can become careless about how food is transformed from the farm to something palatable on our plate. UC Berkeley public policy student, Reem Rayef, interviews Nina Ichikawa at the Berkeley Food Institute about what consumers should be thinking about in their individual consumption choices, but also what the impact the aggregation of those choices means for food over
Episode 202: Talking Policing and Criminal Justice Tara Regan Anderson.
Tara Regan Anderson (MPP '10) is the Director of Policy for the San Francisco District Attorney's Office. She spoke with Jonathan Stein (MPP/JD '13) about the impact incarceration can have on children and families and why criminal justice reform is not just for advocates. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-2-2-talking-polici
Episode 201: Talking Implicit Bias in Policing with Professor Jack Glaser
In the aftermath of the shooting death of Botham Shem Jean by an off-duty Dallas police officer, we're posting a conversation Jasmine Jones (MPA '18) had last spring with Professor Jack Glaser, an expert in stereotyping and implicit bias, especially in policing. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-21-talking-implicit-bias-in-
Episode 105: Talking Mental Health Policy with Jessie Harney
Goldman School student Jessie Harney speaks with host Jonathan Stein (MPP/JD '13) about mental health support for people suffering from PTSD, especially victims of sexual assault. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-5-talking-mental-health-policy-with-jessie-harney
Episode 104: Talking Mental Health Policy with Professor Lonnie Snowden
Host Jonathan Stein (MPP/JD '11) speaks with Dr. Lonnie Snowden of UC Berkeley about the stigma around mental health, disparities in access to mental health services, the Affordable Care Act's impact impact on mental health services, and more. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/episode-4-talking-mental-health-policy-with-professor-l
Episode 103: Talking DACA Student Activism
Goldman School student and DACA recipient Vlad Stoicescu Ghica discusses what brought him to the US from Romania, student activism as an undergrad at UCLA, and what it was like engaging then-newly-installed UC President Janet Napolitano on the subject of DACA and immigration. See show notes and full transcription here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/talking-daca-studen
Episode 102: Talking the Personal side of DACA with Jesús Guzmán
Jesús Guzmán, immigration activist and Goldman student, shares his personal story, what the future of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program might be, and why he resists the narrative of a "good" versus "bad" kind of immigrant. See show notes and full transcript here: https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/news/podcast/talking-immigration-with-jesus-guzman
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