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Arrested Mobility
Charles T. Brown
27 episodes
1 week ago
Why are Black Americans and other people of color disproportionately victims of overly aggressive police enforcement and brutality while walking, running, riding bicycles, taking public transit, or while driving? This podcast explores the ways in which people of color have had their mobility arrested. Hosted by Charles T. Brown, the founder and CEO of Equitable Cities LLC—an urban planning, policy, and research firm working at the intersection of transportation, health, and equity. Charles will take you to the streets of Philly, the sidewalks of Seattle, the neighborhoods of Kansas City, and elsewhere around the U.S. In each place, he'll ask: What can we do to change the outcomes when people of color step out their door to exist in the world?
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Documentary
Society & Culture,
Science,
Life Sciences
RSS
All content for Arrested Mobility is the property of Charles T. Brown and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Why are Black Americans and other people of color disproportionately victims of overly aggressive police enforcement and brutality while walking, running, riding bicycles, taking public transit, or while driving? This podcast explores the ways in which people of color have had their mobility arrested. Hosted by Charles T. Brown, the founder and CEO of Equitable Cities LLC—an urban planning, policy, and research firm working at the intersection of transportation, health, and equity. Charles will take you to the streets of Philly, the sidewalks of Seattle, the neighborhoods of Kansas City, and elsewhere around the U.S. In each place, he'll ask: What can we do to change the outcomes when people of color step out their door to exist in the world?
Show more...
Documentary
Society & Culture,
Science,
Life Sciences
Episodes (20/27)
Arrested Mobility
Supporting Young Athletes: Advancing Beyond in Sports (ABIS)
1 month ago
23 minutes 5 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Narrative Change: The Center for Cultural Power
2 months ago
24 minutes 56 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Housing Reparations: Taking Ownership PDX
5 months ago
17 minutes 9 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Fighting Food Apartheid: The Detroit People's Food Co-op
7 months ago
24 minutes 50 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Breaking the Bedside Barrier: The Legacy of Black Hospitals
12 months ago
21 minutes 40 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Under the Overpass: Noise and Toxic Pollution in New Orleans
1 year ago
17 minutes 28 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Cop City: The Environmental Inequity Facing Atlanta's Black Community
1 year ago
18 minutes 23 seconds

Arrested Mobility
The Double-Edged Sword of Green Infrastructure
1 year ago
26 minutes 47 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Unmasking the Bias: The Trouble with Automated Traffic Enforcement
1 year ago
16 minutes 18 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Beyond Turnstiles: Seeking Justice in Transit, Not Just Fares
1 year ago
30 minutes 12 seconds

Arrested Mobility
15 Critiques of the 15-Minute City
2 years ago
12 minutes 38 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Roadblocks of Reality: The Plight of Undocumented Immigrants in Dairy Country
2 years ago
31 minutes 21 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Schooled by Fear: The Controversial Role of Police in Educational Spaces
2 years ago
27 minutes 40 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Railroad Roadblock: Indiana's Students Held Hostage by Unyielding Trains
2 years ago
23 minutes 21 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Coming Soon: Season 2
2 years ago
2 minutes 37 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Centering Intersectionality in Public Transit
2 years ago
33 minutes 16 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Reasonable Suspicion: The Case of Lance Rodriguez
2 years ago
23 minutes 38 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Contested Spaces
2 years ago
22 minutes 13 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Electric Scooter Bans
3 years ago
28 minutes 9 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Zoning
3 years ago
32 minutes 17 seconds

Arrested Mobility
Why are Black Americans and other people of color disproportionately victims of overly aggressive police enforcement and brutality while walking, running, riding bicycles, taking public transit, or while driving? This podcast explores the ways in which people of color have had their mobility arrested. Hosted by Charles T. Brown, the founder and CEO of Equitable Cities LLC—an urban planning, policy, and research firm working at the intersection of transportation, health, and equity. Charles will take you to the streets of Philly, the sidewalks of Seattle, the neighborhoods of Kansas City, and elsewhere around the U.S. In each place, he'll ask: What can we do to change the outcomes when people of color step out their door to exist in the world?