This is Democracy

This is Democracy
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Mar 24, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 84: Humor in Trying Times

Jeremi sits down with Deborah Grayson Riegel to discuss our varying relationships with humor and how humor helps us in tragedy. Zachary sets the scene with his poem, “The Ones Who Live.” Deborah Grayson Riegel is an executive coach, speaker, instructor, and writer who helps leaders and teams communicate and present more effectively. She has served as an instructor of Management Communication at Wharton Business School and also worked as a Visiting Professor of Executive Communications at the Beijing International MBA Program at Peking University, China. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan, Columbia University, and Stuyvesant High School. Deborah’s clients range from the American Bar Association, American Express, Bloomberg, and Kraft Foods to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Pfizer and the United States Army. She has been a featured expert and a contributor to Harvard Business Review, Inc., and The New York Times. Deborah is the co-author with her teenage daughter Sophie of Overcoming Overthinking: 36 Ways to Tame Anxiety for Work, School, and Life. She and her husband Michael, also an executive coach, live in New York with their rescue dog, Nash.
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Mar 19, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 83: Economic Effects of the Coronavirus

Zachary and Jeremi sit down to discuss the current and future economic impacts of the novel coronavirus. Zachary kicks it off with his original poem, “The Pestilence Depression.”
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Mar 16, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 82: Life in a Time of Coronavirus

Recording live from the Suri household in Austin, TX on Monday, March 16 to discuss what history may teach us about how to handle the COVID-19 outbreak in a responsible, humane way. Poetry by Zachary, “Invisible Fires.”
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Mar 11, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 81: Presidential Primaries: How Have They Evolved Over Time? How Can We Improve Them?

Professor Paul Stekler holds the Wofford Denius Chair in Entertainment Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. He is a nationally recognized documentary filmmaker whose critically praised and award-winning work includes George Wallace: Settin’ the Woods on Fire; Last Man Standing: Politics, Texas Style; Vote for Me: Politics in America, a four-hour PBS special about grassroots electoral politics; two segments of the Eyes on the Prize II series on the history of civil rights; Last Stand at Little Big Horn (broadcast as part of PBS’s series The American Experience); Louisiana Boys: Raised on Politics (broadcast on PBS’s P.O.V. series); Getting Back to Abnormal (which aired on P.O.V. in 2014); and 2016’s Postcards from the Great Divide, a web series about politics for The Washington Post and PBS Digital. Overall, his films have won two George Foster Peabody Awards, three Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Journalism Awards, three national Emmy Awards, and a special jury prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
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Mar 6, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 80: Energy Transitions

Jeremi chats over the phone with Professor Clark Miller to discuss transitions on a global scale to sustainable energy and the numerous, diverse challenges that come with such a task. Zachary sets the scene with his poem, “Eulogy.” Clark Miller is the Director of the Center for Energy and Society at Arizona State University and a Professor in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society. He also leads the sustainability team at the Quantum Energy and Sustainable Solar Technologies photovoltaics engineering research center. For the past decade, his research has explored the human dimensions of large-scale transitions in the energy sector and the potential for leveraging energy transitions to improve human futures. His most recent book, The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures, is free to download as an e-book from the ASU Center for Science and the Imagination. His other books include Designing Knowledge, a guide for organizations who want to better create and use knowledge in decision-making; Science and Democracy: Making Knowledge and Making Power in the Biosciences and Beyond; The Practices of Global Ethics; and Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance.
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Feb 27, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 79: The U.S. Census and Its Importance for American Democracy

Jeremi sits down with Dr. Teresa A. Sullivan to discuss the U.S. Census, it’s history, and how it affects our society today. Zachary sets the scene with his poem, “Dear Governor.” Teresa A. Sullivan, university professor and president emerita of the University of Virginia, is currently serving as the interim provost at Michigan State University, her alma mater. As president of UVA, Sullivan led a team that stimulated the revitalization of the UVA Health System, raised faculty salaries, launched an ambitious program of faculty hiring, raised both the numbers and quality of applications, reached new fundraising records, and launched the university’s bicentennial celebration. Earlier, she was the executive vice president and provost at the University of Michigan, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs for the University of Texas System, and vice president and graduate dean at the University of Texas at Austin. In her academic career as a demographer, Sullivan developed analytic techniques for the use of U.S. Census Public Use Sample. She was an investigator on a large international sample survey, and with law colleagues Elizabeth Warren and Jay Lawrence Westbrook, she led several original large-scale data collections of consumer bankruptcy records. The first book-length analysis of the bankruptcy records, As We Forgive Our Debtors, received the Silver Gavel Award of the American Bar Association. The second book, The Fragile Middle Class, received the Writing Award of the American College of Financial Services Lawyers. Sullivan has held faculty positions at the Universities of Chicago, Texas, Michigan, and Virginia and has received five major teaching awards. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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Feb 18, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 78: The Role of Intelligence Agencies in American Democracy

Jeremi sits down with John Sipher to discuss how intelligence agencies operate within a democracy. As usual, Zachary kicks things off with his original poem, “Supposed to Forget.” John Sipher retired in 2014 after a 28-year career in the Central Intelligence Agency’s National Clandestine Service. At the time of his retirement, he was a member of the CIA’s Senior Intelligence Service, the leadership team that guides CIA activities globally. John served multiple overseas tours as Chief of Station and Deputy Chief of Station in Europe, Asia, and in high-threat environments. John also served as a lead instructor in the CIA’s clandestine training school and was a regular lecturer at the CIA’s leadership development program. He is the recipient of the Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal.
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Feb 14, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 77: Viruses, Diseases, and Public Health Responses

Jeremi sits down with Dr. Christopher Rose to discuss the coronavirus within the context of historical pandemics. As always, Zachary kicks things off with his poem entitled, “With an Unspoken Doubt.” Christopher S Rose is a historian of early modern and modern Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean. He is currently (2019-2020) a Postdoctoral Research fellow at the Institute for Historical Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of “Implications of the Spanish Influenza Pandemic (1918-1920) for the History of Early 20th Century Egypt,” forthcoming in the Journal of World History. He is also currently working on a book project titled Home Front Egypt: Famine, Disease, and Death During the Great War, 1914-1919, which examines the impact of World War I on the Egyptian peasantry, focusing on food shortages and disease.
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Feb 5, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 76: Impeachment

Jeremi sits down to discuss impeachment in context with Professor Jeffery Tulis. As always, Zachary kicks things off with his poem entitled, “Two Images.” Professor Jeffrey Tulis is a leading scholar of American politics and the presidency in particular. He is the author of numerous books, including: The Rhetorical Presidency, The Presidency in the Constitutional Order, and The Legacies of Losing in American Politics.
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Jan 30, 2020 • 0sec

This is Democracy – Episode 75: Uses of Terror by Latin American Dictators

Jeremi sits down with Professor Alan McPherson to discuss the legacy of dictators in Latin American countries, how they used terror to control their regime, and how the U.S. has contributed to and interacted with these regimes in the past and present. Zachary sets the scene with his poem “Excuse Us.” Alan McPherson is a professor of history at Temple University, where he directs the Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy. He is the author of numerous books on U.S.-Latin American relations and U.S. foreign relations. His most recent book is: Ghosts of Sheridan Circle: How a Washington Assassination Brought Pinochet’s Terror State to Justice.

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