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We Who Engage

Author: Ayushi Roy & Ceasar McDowell

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We Who Engage is a movement to rebuild our public’s resilience for the difficult conversations necessary for a functioning democracy. In this podcast, we'll talk about how we can help each other create a democracy that not only survives the many challenges it faces but one that harnesses the collective intelligence of the entire public to do so.
31 Episodes
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In our season finale, Travis Rejman explores how reverence and grace can transform public discourse and community-building efforts. He reflects on the importance of fostering trust and relationships within communities before moving to action.Read more on our Medium site
John Ziegler takes us on a profound exploration of authenticity as a spiritual practice. He highlights the importance of showing up fully as oneself, whether as an elder or a young person, and honoring the wisdom inherent in every stage of life.Read more on our Medium site
Emilie invites us to explore the intersection of belief systems, memory, and artistic practice. She delves into how visual storytelling can challenge conventions and serve as a medium for tracing belonging and history. By integrating questions of trauma, memory, and political identity, Emilie demonstrates how reverence for aesthetics and storytelling can create deeper connections within communities.Read more on our Medium site
Lee Farrow’s episode focuses on the profound connection between love and reverence in grassroots organizing. Drawing inspiration from the Book of Nehemiah, Lee discusses how community-building efforts grounded in love, respect, and honor can create lasting change. She emphasizes the need to set boundaries around what we revere and to ensure that our energy is directed toward worthy causes.Read more on our Medium site
Elizabeth Garlow offers a compelling vision of how reverence can reshape our understanding of economics. She describes the economy not as a machine but as a garden, one that thrives when we approach it with care, interdependence, and a deep respect for humanity and nature.Read more on our Medium site
In this episode, Alethia Jones helps us explore the hidden ways faith, culture, and survival intertwine in personal and collective expression. From the cloaking spiritual identity to the role of reverence in leadership, we examine how people navigate spaces where it is difficult to manifest one’s own personal sense of reverence...Read the rest on our Medium site.
We kick off Season 3 of We Who Engage podcast with our first guest, Aaron Slater, the lead of MIT Solve’s US Interior and Indigenous Communities work. Joined by co-hosts Ceasar McDowell and Ayushi Roy, the discussion delves into the complexities of reverence in public life and the opportunities for creating inclusive civic spaces.To open the conversation, Aaron reflects on the comfort of practicing reverence at home in the Navajo Nation in Round Rock, Arizona.Read more on our Medium site.
We’re excited to announce the much-anticipated return of our podcast with the launch of Season 3 on January 22! Mark your calendars and join us as we delve into an exciting and deeply personal theme: inner space and its role in civic engagement.Building on the rich conversations of our first two seasons, this new season takes things to a whole new level...Read the rest at our Medium site.
Season 2 Recap

Season 2 Recap

2019-11-3030:58

In our series finale, The Move Podcast reflects on Season 2 with their sound engineer, Dave Lishansky. This season, we focused on new actors in the civic space and discovered some incredible people and organizations working to make a difference in their communities. In this episode, we'll recap some of our favorite moments and takeaways from each interview this past season. How can we think about civic life in a way that encourages meaningful change and participation across communities?
In Episode 9, The Move Podcast interviews Antonio Moya-Latorre, artist, architect and planner. Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi join Toni in a piano practice studio at MIT, where he improvises (live!) using some of the emotional themes he felt while facilitating community-centered development in Brazil. Interspersed throughout Toni's improvisations, we talk about how planners can use the arts to inform, enhance, and reflect on the lasting impacts of their work. What does it mean to spark meaningful, sustainable and self-actualizing work in local communities?
In Episode 8, The Move Podcast interviews Nicole Bleuel from Google's Creative Lab. Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi discuss the responsibility of technology companies to build for a more representative public, and the opportunity for tech employees to use their platform's reach for good. We learn about how the Emoji keyboard became more inclusive, and about some of the latest technology that makes the world a little more accessible. Can creating digital products for people at the margins benefit both business and society?
In Episode 7, The Move Podcast interviews Candice Springer and Desiree Arevalo, who manage WBUR's new CitySpace arena in Boston. Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi explore the complexity and considerations involved in building physical spaces that allow for difficult conversation and mutual engagement – particularly across divided city residents. How can we build critical spaces and opportunities to allow for peaceful struggle, interdependence, and ultimately, understanding in a divided society?
In Episode 6, The Move Podcast interviews Monique Gibbs, Policy Innovation Specalist at MassHousing (The Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency). Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi discuss the paradigm and racialized history of lending and the trap of homeownership as the primary path to wealth accumulation in the US.
In Episode 5, The Move Podcast interviews Deborah Marton, Executive Director of the New York Restoration Project (NYRP). Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi discuss the fraught history of land ownership, the possibility of neigbhors developing their own neighborhood, and the power of public space in bringing together community members with disparate histories and cultures.
In Episode 4, The Move Podcast interviews Lindsay Smalling, CEO of Social Capital Markets (SOCAP). We discuss the relationship between capitalism and civic duty, the problem with venture capital, and forms of thoughtful investing that prioritize relationships instead of unregulated growth. Is it possible for money and markets to create local and meaningful connections?
In Episode 3, The Move Podcast interviews David Wertheimer, the former Gates Foundation Director of Community & Civic Engagement. We discuss what it means to be a relational versus transactional corporation, how capital is taking the place of kinship networks, and how organizations could better promote and support healthy relationships.
In Episode 2, The Move Podcast interviews Eric Gordon, professor and founding director of the Engagement Lab at Emerson College. Co-hosts Ceasar and Ayushi explore the nature of this larger tapestry of civic organizations – including media and industry players – and institutional frameworks to maintain legitimacy and public trust.
S2E1 We're Back!

S2E1 We're Back!

2019-07-1802:27

In our first season we focused on public spaces of discourse. We met with people in government and civic society organizations, and discussed how governance could be redesigned to improve public engagement processes. Through our conversations we learned that there isn't a clear delineation of where civic life begins and ends? Political and social preferences are perhaps as evident by where we choose to shop, as how we choose to vote. Now, in season 2 we're tackling this bigger question: What are the private spaces of civic discourse? We are focusing on the new players shaping civic space and civic life: retailers, developers, social media firms, coworking spaces and more.
In the third episode of our Spotlight Series, The Move co-hosts Ceasar McDowell and Ayushi Roy interview Emmett McKinney. We Talk about his work with the Nashville Food Waste Initiative and how listening to our first season changed his experience working with food systems.
In the second of our Spotlight Series, The Move co-hosts Ceasar McDowell and Ayushi Roy interview Holly Harriel. We talk about her work as the founder and CEO of Civic Salon, as Brown University's Director of Education Outreach, and the role of the university in the larger urban environment.
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Comments (1)

Javier Leal

Looking forward 😊

Aug 18th
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