NPR correspondent Odette Yousef has been reporting on the efforts of this new program built on old strategies.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
NPR correspondent Odette Yousef has been reporting on the efforts of this new program built on old strategies.
Email us at [email protected].
But many of the dominant voices ignore the ways history and culture influence how and why we consume.
Enter Christine Platt, The Afrominimalist.
Platt is a lifestyle strategist and author of The Afrominimalist’s Guide To Living With Less. She examines how a history of oppression shapes a community’s views on ownership and consumption.
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Deaths are a lagging indicator — meaning they, too, will soon fall as the omicron wave continues to recede. What does the next phase of the pandemic look like? NPR’s Allison Aubrey explains why some public health experts think the coronavirus may not disappear — but become easier to live with.
In the meantime, workplaces are still reeling from the surge as employees call out sick or must quarantine. NPR’s Andrea Hsu says it’s even worse than last winter’s pre-vaccine surge.
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State Department spokesperson Ned Price tells NPR what leverage the U.S. has to prevent that from happening.
Mary Louise Kelly reports from Kyiv, where some people are preparing for an invasion, even as the Ukraine government urges calm.
Additional reporting in this episode from NPR’s Michele Kelemen and Daniel Estrin.
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NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg explains who might replace Breyer, and NPR political editor Domenico Montanaro outlines how the process will unfold.
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Motherboard’s Gita Jackson considers Whedon’s influence on his fans and, more broadly, pop culture, and freelance tv critic Robyn Bahr talks about the reasons why she doesn’t think she’ll ever rewatch Buffy the Vampire Slayer again.
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Psychiatrist, neurologist and author Bessel van der Kolk explains how the brain processes and recovers from trauma. His 2004 book The Body Keeps the Score surged to the top of bestseller lists during the pandemic.
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In this episode of It’s Been A Minute, host Sam Sanders discusses Talley’s influence and legacy with Saeed Jones and Zach Stafford.
Listen to more It’s Been A Minute with Sam Sanders via Apple, Spotify, or Google.
There are a lot of opinions about how schools should be run during the pandemic, but some key voices are often missing from the conversation – students and teachers.
Over the last few weeks, amid a nationwide surge of coronavirus cases, students across the country have staged walkouts to emphasize various COVID mitigation measures they would like to see implemented. We’ll hear from some of those students.
And we’ll speak to a teacher in Arizona who understands how difficult it is, as a parent, community member and school staffer, to find the right balance between physical health, mental health and educational priorities.
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NPR correspondent Alina Selyukh reports on the like hood of an unwanted holiday gift making it into another customers hands.
And Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi of NPR’s Planet Money podcast visits a bargain bin store in North Carolina where dogged resellers rifle through mounds of unwanted items to find something they can turn for a profit.
Listen to the full Planet Money episode here.
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