Democracy Works

Informações:

Sinopsis

Building and sustaining a democracy is hard work. Its not glamorous and often goes unnoticed in the daily news cycle. On Democracy Works, we talk to people who are out there making it happen and discuss why that work is so important. We aim to rise above partisan bickering and hot takes on the news to have informed, intelligent, and thought-provoking discussions about issues related to democracy. Democracy Works is produced by the McCourtney Institute for Democracy at Penn State and WPSU Penn State.

Episodios

  • Public schools, not government schools

    12/04/2021 Duración: 43min

    Our guest this week argues that, much like democracy itself, public education is an ideal that we’ve never quite lived up to. We discuss the constitutional right to education and how it’s ebbed and flowed over the years, following many of the same trends as support for and access to other democratic institutions. The Trump […]

  • Reforming criminal justice from the inside out

    05/04/2021 Duración: 40min

    Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner joins us to discuss the promise and peril of institutional reform and how he built a coalition of voters who are traditionally overlooked in politics. He spent his career as a civil rights attorney, not a as a prosecutor like his predecessors. He’s part of a growing movement of progressive […]

  • Understanding — and addressing — domestic terrorism

    08/03/2021 Duración: 35min

    The FBI recently reported that it’s opened 2,000 domestic terrorism investigations since 2017. How the United States responds to these threats touches on some of democracy’s most basic tensions. We explore those tensions this week and discuss where things might go from here. When the social fabric and institutions the hold a democracy together are […]

  • Anne Applebaum on why democracy is not inevitable

    01/03/2021 Duración: 44min

    Journalist, author, and historian Anne Applebaum says that democracy is not like running water — something that we know will always be there when we turn on the tap. Her latest book Twilight of Democracy, highlights the ways in which countries around the world are coming to terms with this fact and provides suggestions for how […]

  • A path forward for social media and democracy

    15/02/2021 Duración: 39min

    The U.S. Capitol insurrection broke open a lot of conversations that had long been simmering under the surface about social media and democracy. Michal and Chris discuss this inflection point and our guest, Sinan Aral, shares ideas for how we might move forward. Sinan Aral has spent two decades studying how social media impacts our […]

  • Extreme maps, extreme politics

    18/01/2021 Duración: 38min

    Despite ongoing violence and threats of violence, the wheels of democracy continue to turn, and in 2021 that means redistricting. States will draw new electoral maps this year using data from the 2020 Census. Our guest this week has spent the past decade covering attempts by politicians to draw those maps to their advantage in […]

  • American democracy’s violent disruption

    11/01/2021 Duración: 32min

    This episode was recorded on Friday, January 8, 2021, two days after the day that many of the things we’ve talked about on this show came to a head — political and epistemic polarization, delgitimation of the opposition, degradation of democratic norms, racial inequity, and many other factors. Democracy Works hosts Michael Berkman, Chris Beem, […]

  • What really motivates Trump supporters

    07/12/2020 Duración: 38min

    Many, many articles, books, documentaries — and even podcasts — have been produced over the past four years to explain who Donald Trump’s base is and what motivates people to vote for and otherwise support him. Our guest this week offers answers to these questions that are grounded in social science and political psychology. John […]

  • Wynton Marsalis on democracy as jazz and The Ever Fonky Lowdown

    02/11/2020 Duración: 36min

    Democracy takes center stage on Wynton Marsalis’s latest album, The Ever Fonky Lowdown and his forthcoming work, the Democracy Suite. However, he’s been thinking about the connection between jazz and democracy for his entire career. We are thrilled that he took a few minutes to talk with us about it this week. Listen to this […]

  • News deserts are democracy deserts, too

    26/10/2020 Duración: 42min

    More than 2,000 local newspapers have closed over the past 20 years, leaving some parts of the country in what’s known as a “news desert.” This week, we examine what impact that’s had on civic engagement and democratic participation — and look at ways people are trying to make local news great again. The connection […]

  • Students learn, students vote

    14/09/2020 Duración: 39min

    National Voter Registration Day is September 22. In a normal election year on a college campus, that would mean lots of canvassers with clipboards and pizza parties to encourage students to register. Those activities can’t happen the same way this fall, but our guest this week argues that the pandemic should not detract colleges and […]

  • A dark side to “laboratories of democracy”

    07/09/2020 Duración: 39min

    The phrase “laboratories of democracy,” coined by former U.S. Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis, is typically used to describe experiments with new social and economic policies that occur at the state level — things like voting systems and public financing of elections. This week’s episode explores a different side of that approach when state and […]

  • A fall preview — with a new cohost!

    31/08/2020 Duración: 39min

    We are excited to begin a new school year with a new cohost, Candis Watts Smith, who you may remember from an episode earlier this summer on her book Stay Woke, or from a roundtable discussion on Black politics back in February. In this episode, Michael, Chris, and Candis discuss: The dynamics at play in […]

  • Tracing the past, present, and future of protests

    29/07/2019

    Since we started this show, we’ve had the opportunity to speak with several organizers, from Joyce Ladner in the Civil Rights movement to Srdja Popovic in Serbia to the students involved with the March for Our Lives. Today, we think of protests as a pillar of democratic dissent, but things didn’t necessarily start out that […]

  • Behind the scenes of the “Year of the Woman”

    10/09/2018

    Rebecca Kreitzer One of the biggest headlines to emerge heading into the 2018 midterms is the record number of female candidates in local, state, and national races. While it’s easy to point to this a post-Trump reaction, there’s much more that goes into persuading women to run and helping them raise the money and build […]

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