26 集

This podcast is for leaders and emerging leaders who want to make a difference in the world. The podcast explores strategies, tools and stories to help you strengthen your social change and nonprofit leadership skills.

B-Change B-Change

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This podcast is for leaders and emerging leaders who want to make a difference in the world. The podcast explores strategies, tools and stories to help you strengthen your social change and nonprofit leadership skills.

    ONLINE Lunch and Learn at JCC Manhattan: How Positive Practices Help Achieve Social Justice

    ONLINE Lunch and Learn at JCC Manhattan: How Positive Practices Help Achieve Social Justice

    On June 16 Marcy and I zoomed down to Manhattan to participate in a dialogue about positive psychology and social justice, one of the central themes of the B-Change podcast. Our conversation highlights the very timely need to connect positive practices — such as focusing on strengths, practicing meditation, expressing gratitude — with systemic social change.JCC Manhattan, through its online lunch and learn program, co-sponsored by the Wholebeing Institute, devoted a full week to discussions on this topic. We hope the energy remains strong to continue to connect positive psychology and social justice into the future and to take action as allies to communities of color.In this episode, Marcy and I are interviewed by Caroline Kohles, Senior Director of Health & Wellness Programming at JCC. We would also like to express our gratitude to Phoebe Atkinson, who worked behind the scenes to make this episode possible.We spoke with Caroline about:
    How social justice leaders can use the tools of positive psychology to be more effective and resilient during difficult times.
    How the leadership of social justice organizations can better reflects social justice values.
    What is the role of a white leader in a time of black and brown-led activism?

    • 1 小時 1 分鐘
    The Rise of MAMAS: Solidarity Not Charity

    The Rise of MAMAS: Solidarity Not Charity

    Jessie Norriss joined Mutual Aid of Medford and Somerville (MAMAS) on March 12, 2020, just as the coronavirus pandemic began and when the group was barely a week old. MAMAS, like other mutual aid societies that popped up around the country at that time, played an essential role in the collection and distribution of needed goods and services like food, rent, language interpretation, and transportation.But there is more to this story. MAMAS’ slogan, like many other mutual aid societies around the country, is “Solidarity not charity.”As Jessie says in this B-Change interview, “In charities, you're coming from a place of ‘I have something to offer to these poor disenfranchised communities over there but I'm not a part of them.’ We really try to break down that hierarchy.’”Even as MAMAS has helped community members share needed resources during the crisis, they also sought to address systemic inequities that have become much more obvious during the pandemic. For example, with many languages spoken in the communities that MAMAS is working in, MAMAS has made language justice a priority, engaging residents proficient in languages other than English.As Jessie told us, “We came forward first as neighbors supporting neighbors but there is an underlying political education and redistribution campaign that obviously we're not going to shy away from.”We also talk with Jessie about:
    How the volunteers at MAMAS were able to quickly set up a structure that could respond to many needs of the communities that MAMAS worked with.
    The connection between her study of water quality at Tufts University’s Department of Urban and Environmental Planning and Policy and her organizing and technical support role at MAMAS.
    The story of the neighbor to neighbor snow shoveling brigade that MAMAS grew out of.
     
    Resources mentioned in this episode:Mutual aid Medford and Somerville (MAMAS) MAMAS Replication Document: Mutual Aid: how to build a network in your neighborhood (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ca-sz4DRNvUg8ezcrfd6awH-ahxBDJwnbdzxm4_qDVs/edit)Tufts University Department of Urban and environmental policy and Planning (https://as.tufts.edu/uep/)Wikipedia article and talk about the origins and meaning of mutual aid societies (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_aid_(organization_theory)Article: Solidarity Not Charity: Mutual Aid for Mobilization and Survival by Dean Spade (http://www.deanspade.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Mutual-Aid-Article-Social-Text-Final.pdf)

    • 27 分鐘
    Sharing Leadership: A Conversation with Sheerine Alemzadeh (Re-release)

    Sharing Leadership: A Conversation with Sheerine Alemzadeh (Re-release)

    Is it healthy for an organization to have leadership centralized in one person — the executive director? Is leadership development “one size fits all”?Sheerine Alemzadeh and Karla Altmayer turned the conventional model of nonprofit leadership on its head when they co-founded Healing to Action, a Chicago-based nonprofit that engages low wage workers in combatting sexual violence. In this episode, Alemzadeh takes our listeners into her organization’s journey, where they tackled: - Broadening leadership from one central leader to a co-directorship model. - Sharing power and leadership with their constituents — survivors of sexual violence. - Finding new ways to tap these survivors’ unique strengths, recognizing that traditional organizing fails to account for their traumatic experiences.
    Sheerine recommended two resources:Emergent Strategy by Adrienne Maree Brown https://www.akpress.org/emergentstrategy.htmlTrauma Stewardship, Laura Lipskyhttps://traumastewardship.com/laura-van-dernoot-lipsky/

    • 32 分鐘
    Special Re-release: Storming The Barricades: A Conversation With Tomas Aguilar

    Special Re-release: Storming The Barricades: A Conversation With Tomas Aguilar

    When a hurricane or tropical storm hits Texas, Tomas Aguilar wants the immigrant residents he works with to be effectively organized to withstand the storms. The Living Hope Wheelchair Association where he works seeks to make sure that immigrants of limited means can be protected and that they have a voice in public policy that will improve the chances for their survival in the future.In this episode, Tomas talks about: - After the devastation of Hurricane Harvey, how his small organization visited the mobile homes and trailers where many of their constituents actually lived and found ways to better connect immigrants with the aid that was lacking after that hurricane.  - Tools and techniques that can help new leaders be more effective at using data to reduce the disproportionate impact of catastrophic events. - His own story as a person who made a transition from working in fast food restaurants to working for social justice organizations.Resources: - Risk Amid Recovery: Occupational Health and Safety of Latino Day Laborers in the Aftermath of the Gulf Coast Hurricanes, Linda Delp, Laura Podolsky, and Tomás Aguilar - Living Hope Wheelchair Association - Tech Soup - tech for nonprofits  - Progressive Technology Project - United for a Fair Economy

    • 36 分鐘
    Community Planning From The Inside Out With Allentza Michel

    Community Planning From The Inside Out With Allentza Michel

    Growing up in Mattapan, a neighborhood on the southern tip of Boston that today comprises predominantly people of color, Allentza Michel didn’t know that urban planning was even a potential field of study for her. Yet, she felt its impacts every day: a history of redlining, segregation, and, more recently, gentrification. But she also experienced the community’s rich tradition of “looking after each other”. As she became familiar with the field of urban planning, it didn’t appear that there was a place for her as a Haitian-American woman, given that the vast majority of planners were white, male, and middle-class. Those planners looked and thought more like the elected officials who were hiring them and making critical decisions about the future of neighborhoods like hers.Now Allentza has joined with a network of women of color who are taking planning processes and “flipping them on their head” in order to ensure that the people most impacted have a strong voice at the table. Allentza has a Masters in Public Policy from Tufts University's Urban and Environmental Planning and Policy program. In this episode, she describes:
     - The need to disrupt traditional planning through approaches that put impacted residents at the center — such as community-engaged “civic hacks” which generate outside-the-box ideas in historically marginalized neighborhoods. - Some key principles and practices that leaders can use to engage in democratic planning processes. - Her experience launching a nonprofit organization that both fosters innovative, inclusive community planning processes and seeks to itself reflect those democratic and participative values.  Resources mentioned in this episode:The Color of Law, Richard RothsteinA People’s History of New Boston, Jim VrabelGo Boston 2030Interaction Institute for Social ChangePowerful Pathways,Mattapan Open StudiosMel King InstituteMass Smart Growth AllianceMasters in Public Policy from Tufts University's Urban and Environmental Planning and Policy program

    • 37 分鐘
    Can Joy Fuel The Revolution? Ask Marc Cordon.

    Can Joy Fuel The Revolution? Ask Marc Cordon.

    In school growing up, Marc Cardon had been repeatedly bullied and mocked In school because teachers and students thought he looked “Native American.” So, it’s hardly surprising that when he first became engaged with social justice activism, he developed tactics rooted in anger and fear.When Marc was first exposed to positive psychology, he was skeptical. He knew that fear and anger had been effective strategies for him and for social movements in general to accomplish their goals. But where could positive emotions like joy fit into the picture? And could these positive emotions help fuel a social movement and the individuals who make it up? He enrolled in the Certificate in Positive Psychology Program offered by the Whole Being Institute to investigate where positive psychology can overlap with social justice.In this episode, Marc talks about: - The challenge in finding the right balance between positive and negative emotions in social justice work. - The value of positive emotions and rituals to building a sense of community, enabling individuals and movements to sustain themselves, especially when the work gets difficult. - How The Joy Revolution, the organization he co-founded, “teaches change-agents, luminaries, and other do-gooders how to create positive social impact and lasting change through an expanded experience of joy.”Resources:Videos:A Revolution of Joy / Marc Cordon / Speakers Who Dare NYC 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbmdJjfJFMIHow to Have Extraordinary Growth on Ordinary Days | Marc Cordon | TEDxFarmingdale. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkn31_553L8&t=369s
    Organizations:The Joy Revolution. https://joyrevolution.com/
    Books:Beyond Resilient: The Coach's Guide to Ecstatic Growth. https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Resilient-Coachs-Ecstatic-Growth-ebook/dp/B076JK4SBJAuthors/theories mentioned in the episode:Victor Frankl - Man’s Search for MeaningCharles Snyder, Hope TheoryCarol Dweck, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

    • 37 分鐘

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