Journalists Discuss Housing Equality and Media Narratives
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Journalists Discuss Housing Equality and Media Narratives |
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This Video Uploaded At 15-06-2023 11:04:27 |
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00:00 Welcome, Land Acknowledgement, and Honoring of the Lost
3:50 Felukah performance
9:29 Introduction of the Panel
11:10 Moderator's Welcome
13:27 How can journalism convey histories of racist housing policies and connect them to ongoing racism and discrimination embedded in housing access today?
19:36 How are issues of housing affordability and overcrowding playing out in rural communities you’ve been covering in Alaska, as they navigate the wider impacts of the climate crisis?
22:42 What are the specific structural and legal barriers affecting both renting and homeowning Detroiters amid an ongoing foreclosure crisis?
27:24 How can community-centered reporting illuminate complex histories of segregationist policies and colonization, while connecting Indigenous peoples to one another and other marginalized communities? What else should we know about housing justice and Indigenous communities?
34:00 How do you use your medium to give voice to people whose stories have not been heard, and protect them from being re-traumatized during interviews? How do you manage your own experience in carrying painful histories?
40:20 What does homelessness look like in Seattle? How do you cover it and push back against national narratives about the unhoused in your work?
43:48 What are some of the challenges facing homeowners in Detroit?
50:20 How can journalism amplify and draw resources from grassroots community-based organizing and activism?
53:57 How has the Samish Nation organized to create housing justice?
57:19 What trauma-informed interview techniques do you recommend for interviewees who want to remain anonymous?
1:03:19 What interview techniques do you recommend for people who are living in homelessness?
1:05:50 Are there things you wish you'd known about a city before you started reporting on housing policy issues in that place?
1:10:30 How well-versed did you have to be on Indigenous housing policies and federal treaties before reporting on those issues?
1:14:53 How do you get through to editors who don't see the need for upholding people's dignity and strength when reporting on housing justice?
1:17:31 How do you encourage journalists at high-profile outlets to go deeper in reporting on communities and their histories and stop perpetuating extractive, pro-developer narratives?
1:20:08 How do you maintain objectivity when examining systems of injustice or matters of life and death?
1:23:03 How do you respond to people who say traditional journalism is unconcerned with narrative?
1:24:49 In addition to investigating and reporting on housing insecurity, would it be valuable to also report on the solution side?
1:27:51 Closing Remarks and Good Night
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ABOUT THE CONVERSATION
How can journalism punch through the myths about the causes and consequences of unaffordable housing? How does unbiased reporting deepen our understanding of the historic and structural forces that drive inequality? How is the work impacted by an age of disinformation and politically stoked division?
THE BIGGER PICTURE: A Town Hall about Journalism and Housing Narratives
May 24, 2023
With Greg Kim, Natalie Y. Moore, Jaisal Noor, Nushrat Rahman, and Luna Reyna. Moderated by Kavitha Rajagopalan. Opening performance by Felukah.
Week 5 of 5:
CLOSE TO HOME: Town Halls on Housing Equality
Presented by The WNET Group.
Curated by Brian Tate.
Program management by Jasmine Wilson.
ABOUT THE PARTICIPANTS
Moderator
Kavitha Rajagopalan, Director, Asian Media Initiative at CUNY’s Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism
Panelists
Greg Kim, Project Homeless Reporter, The Seattle Times
Natalie Y. Moore, Reporter, Race, Class and Communities, WBEZ
Jaisal Noor, Reporter; Democracy Cohort Manager, Solutions Journalism Network
Nushrat Rahman, Reporter, Detroit Free Press and BridgeDetroit
Luna Reyna, Indigenous Affairs Reporter, Crosscut
Opening Performance
Felukah, Egyptian Singer, Rapper & Activist
ABOUT THE SERIES
CLOSE TO HOME: Town Halls on Housing Equality (April 26-May 24) is a five-part digital summit with frontline thinkers and doers from across New York City and around the country. Each week, we examine housing equality through a critical lens: housing and economic justice, food sovereignty and security, homelessness and community, culture and displacement, and media narratives about housing.
Learn more at thirteen.org/CloseToHome
https://www.thirteen.org/blog-post/housing-equality-series-close-to-home/
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