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In Praxis

In Praxis

By The Praxis Project

The Praxis Project's In Praxis podcast shares the stories of our community-based partner organizations and how they are impacting health disparities through local initiatives, policy change, and advocacy. Each episode highlights how these diverse organizations are creatively addressing social justice issues across the country, all with the same goal of health justice. By uplifting our partners’ strategies and tactics to solve local issues, we hope other organizations will find value in these lessons and experiences.
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Organic Community Power - Albino Garcia

In PraxisJul 20, 2022

00:00
26:38
Organic Community Power - Albino Garcia

Organic Community Power - Albino Garcia

Albino Garcia is the Executive Director and Founder of La Plazita Institute. Over the last 18 years, La Plazita has been serving New Mexico's communities through economic, cultural, agricultural and community revitalization through organizing and power building. In this episode, Albino gives a rich history of how La Plazita came into existence. He discusses La Plazita's philosophies of "La Cultura Cura" and how they are healing formally incarcerated youth and families through connecting them to the land. Albino also takes time to dive deep into what it means to build organic community power. He encourages organizers and movement workers to continue to take care of your community first, and the rest will follow.

Jul 20, 202226:38
Building A Community of Earthseed - Ashely Gripper

Building A Community of Earthseed - Ashely Gripper

Dr. Ashley Gripper is the co-creator and co-director of Land Based Jawns, a Philly based organization committed to reclaiming ancestral, earthly, and spiritual relationships with Mama Earth and land for Black folks. In this episode, Ashley tells an in-depth story of her life—sharing all the interconnected moments, memories and experiences that brought her to the land work that she does daily. Through joy, grief, sorrow, and healing, all things return back to the earth and so should we. Land Based Jawns' mission and work is deeply inspired by Octavia Butlers' books: "Parable of the Sower" and "Parable of the Talents" as foundations to building communities of people rooted by establishing a healthy relationships with the land. Ashley, discusses her research around building "Agricultural Community Power" and the ways we rethink measuring success to align with Black ways of knowing that captures the practice of Ubuntu and interdependence.

Jul 05, 202248:17
[Spanish] Derechos de los Trabajadores, ¡Justicia Alimentaria! / Workers' Rights, Food Justice! - Lupe Gonzalo

[Spanish] Derechos de los Trabajadores, ¡Justicia Alimentaria! / Workers' Rights, Food Justice! - Lupe Gonzalo

Nuestra lucha por la justicia alimentaria debe incluir a los que trabajan más cerca de nuestros alimentos. La organizadora de trabajadores agrícolas, Lupe Gonzalo, de la Coalición de Trabajadores de Immokalee (CIW) comparte el profundo poder que se encuentra dentro de las voces de los trabajadores agrícolas. Como trabajadora agrícola, Lupe arroja luz sobre las condiciones abusivas en las que están sujetos trabajadores agrícolas, desde el robo de salaries, la agresión sexual, y condiciones similares a esclavitud moderna. Los intentos fallidos de responsabilizar a los propietarios de granjas por las atrocidades en curso llevaron a Lupe y sus colegas a recurrir al poder de la responsabilidad social. El programa y la campaña Fair Food de CIW amplifican las voces de los trabajadores agrícolas para promover el cambio y fomentar la responsabilidad entre las grandes corporaciones de alimentos para establecer un código de conducta entre sus proveedores. Yendo más allá de establecer protecciones y garantizar que las políticas de seguridad se implementen y hagan cumplir, CIW ha luchado para construir poder, voz y agencia entre los trabajadores agrícolas en Immokalee, FL e inspirado a defensores en todo el país.

Our fight for food justice must include those working closest to our food. Farmworker organizer, Lupe Gonzalo, of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) shares the profound power that lies within farmworker voices. As a farmworker herself, Lupe sheds light on the abusive conditions farmworkers work and live in everyday—from wage theft to sexual assault to modern-day slavery. Failed attempts to hold farm owners accountable for on-going atrocities led Lupe and her colleagues to turn to the power of social responsibility. CIWs Fair Food Program and campaign amplifies farmworker voices to advance change and foster responsibility among large food corporations to establish a code of conduct amongst their vendors. Going beyond establishing protections and ensuring that safety policies are implemented and enforced, CIW has worked to build power, voice, and agency among farmworkers in Immokalee, FL and inspired advocates nation-wide.

Jun 22, 202247:08
The Power of Youth Led Food Justice - Bevelyn Afor Ukah

The Power of Youth Led Food Justice - Bevelyn Afor Ukah

Bevelyn Afor Ukah believes that youth power holds the key to our survival and collective freedom. Only through our ability to be in multigenerational relationships with one another in our organizing efforts, will we be able to achieve the just world we know we deserve. Bevelyn's work at the Food Youth Initiative (FYI) at the Center for Environmental Farming System, centers their work in the Food justice space. Food Justice for FYI is more than just about food access, their organizing efforts span across interconnected issue areas leading us towards liberation. Bevelyn speaks to us as a person ever learning from the wisdom and leadership that youth have to offer, sharing the stories of her student organizers and all the ways they are working to transform our communities for the future.

Jun 07, 202236:45
Getting Back to Mother Earth - Donne Gonzalez & Emily Arasim

Getting Back to Mother Earth - Donne Gonzalez & Emily Arasim

In this episode of In Praxis, we are joined by Donne Gonzalez and Emily Arasim from New Mexico Acequia Association (NMAA). Donne is the Farm Trainer/Farm Manager and Emily serves as the Youth Education Coordinator. Both Donne and Emily are deeply committed in serving as caretakers, and passing on knowledge about intergenerational farming and the larger systems impacting people living in the area. They discuss the importance of returning our hands and hearts to the land starting with the land in our backyard. Through building our relationships back with the land, the cascading consequences builds and heals our communities.

May 23, 202243:26
Rooted in Praxis - amaha sellassie

Rooted in Praxis - amaha sellassie

amaha sellassie is a public-sociologist working to transform communities through a love ethic. In this episode, amaha shares the story of how Gem City Market, a worker owned cooperative, came into existence. Gem City Market is the first full service grocery store in West Dayton, Oh. amaha shares his insight and perspective on the socio-political and economic dynamics that sparked the necessary change in his community. West Dayton is becoming a place that provides for one another with a deep sense of care and commitment to being a thriving community and Gem City Market is one of the first steps in this transformation. As listeners, we are asked think about what unlimited resources are already abundant with us and our communities that will fuel our fights in justice.

May 09, 202235:00
Planting Seeds to Grow Community - Angela Patel

Planting Seeds to Grow Community - Angela Patel

As a second generation Pan-Asian American, Angela Patel (she/her) uses her cultural history to shape and influence her work at Danny Woo Community Garden as the Sustainable Community and Educational Coordinator. Danny Woo Community Garden is situated in the heart of Seattle's Chinatown-International District stewarded, cultivated, and cared for by the local community of Asian elders, transient neighbors, and lovers of the land. In this episode, Angela discusses what food sovereignty means and how to combat scarcity mindset in immigrant communities by cultivating a culture of abundance.

Apr 23, 202221:13
History Bearing Fruit to the Present - Kyle Tsukahira

History Bearing Fruit to the Present - Kyle Tsukahira

Kyle Tsukahira is the Co-Director of Asian Pacific Islander Forward Movement (APIFM) based in Los Angeles, CA. In this episode, Kyle shares his journey into food justice work, starting with a memory of foods that remind him of home. Kyle tells us about his lineage and the ancestors that brought agricultural practices from the East and adapted them in western soil, passing down knowledge from one generation to the next. Through their Food Roots program, APIFM partners with local Asian American farmers and other farmers of color growing culturally relevant food, and supports food distribution to local businesses and communities. Since the beginning of the pandemic, the Food Roots program has worked to provide over 180,000 lbs of fresh produce and over 150,000 eggs to thousands of families in need across Los Angeles County.

Apr 11, 202233:22
Feeding the Generations to Come - Carleton Turner

Feeding the Generations to Come - Carleton Turner

Co-founder, co-director, and lead artist of the Mississippi Center for Cultural Production, Carlton Turner works at the intersection of arts, culture, and agriculture. Carlton comes from a long lineage of workers of the land and believes in the power of storytelling through food. In this episode, Carlton tells his food story—a deeply compelling tale that tells the socio-political and economic history of Utica, Mississippi as it connects to the current day. Through the unfolding interconnected history between power and agency, Carlton makes the case for community investment, empowerment, and access to food and our story as we journey back towards regenerative food practices for the generations to come.

Mar 26, 202231:55
Finding Freedom in Food - Emanuel Brown

Finding Freedom in Food - Emanuel Brown

Space Curator, Facilitator and conjuror of spaces for freedom, Emanuel H. Brown (he/him), Executive Director and Steward of Acorn Center for Restoration and Freedom, life's work centers around the question of How can people get free? How can people feel free? In this episode, Emanuel explores ideas of freedom through our ability to access healthy and health promoting food and our connection to the land. Food is a story. Food is restoring. Food is a mechanism for our healing. Our collective relationship to food and its source can transform not only our bodies but our world as we strive for liberation.

Mar 12, 202238:31
Taking on the Giant - Janna Cordeiro 
Jun 04, 202123:49
Centering Community in Soda Taxes - Christina Goette 
May 21, 202129:37
Building on Historic Public Health Efforts - Holly Scheider 
May 07, 202145:02
Community-led Participatory Policymaking - Sara Soka
Apr 23, 202122:43
Sweet Danger - Jeff Ritterman
Apr 09, 202132:41
Combatting the Rise of Soda - Mike Jacobson

Combatting the Rise of Soda - Mike Jacobson

Mar 26, 202131:12
The Power of Personal Connections - Winnie Huston
Mar 12, 202135:57
The Case for Equity-based Policy Processes - Rod Lew
Feb 26, 202129:41
Reclaiming Indigenous Lifeways & Foodways - Denisa Livingston
Feb 12, 202141:51
A Systems Transformation Approach - Xavier Morales

A Systems Transformation Approach - Xavier Morales

According to the CDC, half of Black and Brown children born in 2000 can expect to develop diabetes in their lifetime. Xavier Morales, Executive Director of the Praxis Project, reflects on the structures that drive such inequities in communities of color and makes the case for a transformative systems approach to health inequities caused by sugar sweetened beverages. Challenging us to think of health equity as a verb, rather than a noun, he uplifts community-imagined and -led health and education initiatives as critical tools in the fight against the beverage industry. Drawing on SSB tax work done in Oakland, Berkeley, and Philadelphia, he argues that reinvestment of SSB tax revenue into communities most impacted by the beverage industry's predatory marketing to do this work is necessary to build the power needed to oppose the industry's exploitation and obfuscation of the truth. This episode of In Praxis is a part of Season 2: Sugar Sweetened Beverage Taxes.

Jan 29, 202138:08
Tere Almaguer - PODER

Tere Almaguer - PODER

This podcast episode in Communities Building Power for Health (CBPH) Series features Tere Almaguer of PODER, an organization based in the San Francisco's Mission District.   Brought to you by the Praxis Project.

Aug 04, 201928:06
Joseph Martinez II - Miami Children's Initiative (MCI)

Joseph Martinez II - Miami Children's Initiative (MCI)

Miami Children's Initiative (MCI) is #BuildingPowerForHealth in Liberty City, FL. Joseph Martinez II, MCI's Health & Wellness Coordinator, shares with The Praxis Project how MCI operates as well as his experiences organizing the Fresh Food Co-Op program, promoting healthy food access, and his hopes to expand it! Watch the video to see how MCI is promoting food justice and working towards health equity for their neighborhood.

To support MCI or to learn more about this organization, please visit their website at iamlibertycity.org!

For more highlights of communities organizing for healthier environments check out our Communities Building Power for Health video & podcast series: http://bit.ly/CommunitiesBuildingPower

#HealthIsCommunityPower #CBPH #FoodJustice

Music: Juan RIOS - Cosmos

Aug 02, 201945:56
Guy Reiter of Menikanaehkem Community Rebuilders

Guy Reiter of Menikanaehkem Community Rebuilders

In this podcast episode of Communities Building Power for Health, we speak with Guy Reiter (Anahqwet) on the Menominee Reservation in Wisconsin about his organization Menikanaehkem and their work in rebuilding their community by fostering language and cultural revitalization. 

Aug 01, 201932:18
Genoveva Islas - Cultiva La Salud's Vendors For Health Project

Genoveva Islas - Cultiva La Salud's Vendors For Health Project

In this second webisode of Communities Building Power for Health, The Praxis Project interviews Genoveva Islas, the director of Cultiva La Salud, an organization working for health and social justice in Fresno, CA. Fresno is a food desert and obesity and diabetes are a major issue disproportionately affecting the health of the community. In an effort to improve health through local food choices, Cultiva La Salud is introducing a new program: Vendors For Health. Vendors For Health are mobile fruit and veggie vendors who are determined to give their community healthier food options! We visited their community kitchen, Food Commons Fresno, where mobile vendors prepare their daily product and spoke to Genoveva about her experiences and insights organizing Vendors For Health, changing city policy and building power in the community.

Aug 22, 201809:52
Janet Robinson-Flint - Black Women for Wellness

Janet Robinson-Flint - Black Women for Wellness

In our 3rd webisode of Communities Building Power for Health, The Praxis Project interviews Janet Robinson Flint, the Executive Director of Black Women for Wellness, an organization focusing on improving health and social justice conditions for black women.  We sent Jeremiah Headen to Los Angeles to speak with Black Women for Wellness to learn about the organization, what they do and what practices have been successful in their mission to build power.

Aug 07, 201825:46
Kelly Carlisle - Acta Non Verba Youth Urban Farm Project

Kelly Carlisle - Acta Non Verba Youth Urban Farm Project

Acta Non Verba: Youth Urban Farm Project (ANV) elevates life in the inner-city by challenging oppressive dynamics and environments through urban farming. Founded and led mainly by women of color from the surrounding neighborhood and larger community, ANV creates a safe and creative outdoor space for children, youth, and families in East Oakland, CA. Within this severely economically depressed neighborhood in the nation’s second most dangerous city, ANV engages and deepens their understanding of nutrition, food production, and healthy living as well as strengthens their ties to the community.

For more information about Acta Non Verba: http://www.anvfarm.org

Sep 01, 201723:46