New Episodes of the Pandemicene Podcast!

We are thrilled to release new episodes for season two of the Pandemicene Podcast! This podcast is part of The Pandemicene Project, which is rooted from the premise that creating trust-worthy knowledge that can foster a more just world requires attending to both the COVID-19 pandemic and the deep inequalities and fissures in the polity that this pandemic has laid bare. It also requires attending both to what is going on locally (e.g., from the shelter-in-place locations of our students), while drawing on the power and insights of global networks.

In season one we interviewed colleagues from our robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners, discussing with them the projects they were working on to grapple with and take action on the many forms of inequality and injustice the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed and amplified.

For season two, our overarching theme is: Listening to the Pandemic. Over this last year, many of our standard modes of collectively learning and perceiving the world have been forced to shift and adapt. In the wake of these changes, we, as a team of students at UC Santa Cruz, have been experimenting with new ways of sensing our interconnected worlds, especially how we listen, and who we listen to. Our aim has been to denaturalize listening. Through having conversations, we have listened to how different communities have responded to the multiple crises of this year, as well as to how the pandemic has intersected with movements for racial and social justice.

This season features three episodes. In the first, Sandy Chung explores the surge of xenophobia in her podcast centered on anti-Asian hate and violence, amplifying the voices of members of the Asian-American community whose stories tend to be left unheard. In the second, Sophia Parizadeh  interviews four women of color – Aissata Ba, Ekta Menghani, Dr. Taraneh Sarlati, and Dr. Paria Sadat Musavi Gharavi – about their racialized and gendered experiences of labor and employment, and life more generally, this past year. Finally, Isa Ansari and Dennis Browe speak with activist-scholar Dean Spade about his new book, Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During This Crisis (and the Next). These episodes, 11 – 13, can be found at: https://pandemicene.ucsc.edu/category/podcast/.

We give our special thanks to Samuel Levin Cowles and Joseph Tejeda for helping develop this season’s theme, and to Jeff Aquino for superb sound mixing and audio editing.

We consider listening to be an act of world-making. We invite our listeners to also tune in and experiment with us. With a refocused awareness, what new insights may arise about how to connect across divides to learn and live together in the Pandemicene?

March 9, 2021 | V is For Veracity: a University Forum

On Tuesday, March 9, 2021 at 5:30pm–7:00pm PST, there was a University Forum featuring SJRC Founding Director and Professor of Sociology Jenny Reardon with introductions and Q&A moderation by Assistant Professor of Sociology James Doucet-Battle.

A recording is available on YouTube.

Learn More

Co-Sponsored by University Relations, the Science & Justice Research Center, the Institute for Social Transformation, and the Sociology Department.

The Pandemicene Podcast Season 2 launches January 27!

The SJRC Pandemicene Project to reworld towards justice Season 2 of the podcast series begins airing January 27th!

Episode #10 of the series will feature a roundtable discussion with the Pandemicene Team graduate and undergraduate students who crafted and produced 9 podcast episodes, 9 blogs, and a zine for Season 1.
Podcast episodes air Wednesday evenings, 7:00 – 8:00PM PST, on KZSC Santa Cruz. Tune in to 88.1FM or http://streaming.kzsc.org/. Podcast episodes are also available on Spotify and archived on the project site.

The Pandemicene Project launches website for student podcasts and blogs

How do we create knowledge that orients us towards justice at this critical historical juncture, in the middle of a viral pandemic, and a pandemic of social inequality and racial discrimination that has sparked global unrest?

The SJRC Pandemicene Project to Re-world Towards Justice has launched a new website to host student podcasts and blogs!  The Pandemicene Project can be found at: https://pandemicene.ucsc.edu/.

 

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 9: Isa Ansari with Ruth Müller

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, December 13th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below after the episode airs.

 

 

Welcome to the Pandemicene podcast! Today we welcome you to a conversation with Ruth Müller.

Guest Bio:

Ruth Müller is a researcher in the interdisciplinary research field of Science & Technology studies. She has studied molecular biology (M.Sc.; 2000-2007) and sociology (PhD; 2007-2012) at the University of Vienna, Austria. During her studies, she conducted research on breast cancer at the Medical University of Vienna  (2001-2005) before she started to work on issues of life sciences, society & policy at the Department of Science and Technology Studies at the University of Vienna (2005-2011). She held postdoctoral positions at the Austrian Institute of International Affairs  (2012-2013) and at the Research Policy Institute, Lund University, Sweden (2013-2015), and she has been a recurring visiting research the Science & Justice Research Center, University of California Santa Cruz, U.S.. In February 2015, she was appointed Assistant Professor of Science & Technology Policy at the Munich Center for Technology in Society, a co-appointment with the TUM School of Management and the TUM School of Life Sciences.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 8: Paloma Medina with Martha Kenney

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Aired on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, December 6th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome to the Pandemicene Podcast. Today we welcome you to a conversation with Martha Kenney, recorded on September 22nd, 2020. Dr. Kenney is an Associate Professor in the Women and Gender Studies Department at San Francisco State University, and an interdisciplinary scholar in the science, technology, and society hub there. In this conversation, we touch on many topics, from the fables of individualism that have dominated popular discourse around the COVID-19 pandemic, to the importance of media literacy, to the role that speculative fiction can play in processing our current reality and opening space up to imagine new worlds. Our conversation begins with Dr. Kenney telling us about how she has guided her attention throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and how she has responded thus far.

Guest Bios:

Martha Kenney (Ph.D. History of Consciousness, UC Santa Cruz) is an Associate Professor in the Women and Gender Studies department at San Francisco State University. She is a feminist science studies scholar whose research explores the poetics and politics of biological storytelling. Her current project examines and intervenes in the narratives emerging from the new field of environmental epigenetics, which studies how signals from the environment affect gene expression. Specifically, she looks at how assumptions about gender, race, class and sexuality influence the design of epigenetic experiments on model organisms and how we understand the relationship between bodies and environments. She has recent and forthcoming articles in Social Studies of Science, Science as Culture, Biosocieties and Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience. Dr. Kenney teaches courses on the politics of science, technology, medicine and the environment. Dr. Kenney was a founding graduate student researcher with the UC Santa Cruz Science & Justice Working Group and a fellow of the Science & Justice Training Program.

Works Cited in Interview:

Penkler, Michael; Ruth Müller; Martha Kenney; and Mark Hanson. “Back to normal? Building community resilience after COVID-19.” The Lancet: Diabetes & Endocrinology. August 2020.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 7: Tee Wicks with Owain Williams

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, November 29th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below after the episode airs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome to the Pandemicene podcast where we attempt to create knowledge that orients us towards justice at this critical historical juncture. On May 13th, 2020, we spoke with Dr. Owain Williams, Lecturer in International Relations and Global Security at the University of Leeds, and a former Senior Research Fellow at the University of Queensland. Dr. Williams is a political economist of global health, who focuses on health policy and intellectual property rights and access to medicines. We talked about his COVID Diaries project, privatization of the aged care sector, the pandemic as a crisis of capitalism, and the necessity for universal health coverage policies. Though much time has passed and the pandemic has evolved, we hope to think together with our listeners about which of Dr. Williams’s thoughts and predictions have been accurate and useful, and which parts we all need to think anew.

Guest Bio:

Dr. Owain Williams is a Lecturer in International Relations and Global Security at the University of Leeds, and a former Senior Research Fellow at the University of Queensland. He is an expert on the politics and political economy of health policy, and on intellectual property rights and access to medicines. He worked for the UNDP as a consultant on this area in 2014. He has published on access to medicines and global health governance, and new actors in health. His work includes, with Adrian Kay (eds.) Global Health Governance: Crisis, Institutions and Political Economy (Palgrave 2009); Partnerships and Foundations in Global Health Governance with Simon Rushton (eds.) ((Palgrave 2011), New Political Economy of Pharmaceuticals in the Global South (Palgrave 2013); and The Transformation of Global Health Governance (Palgrave 2014).​ He manages a range of projects on testing with the Queensland Chair in HIV and STIs and works in the broad area of global health governance from a platform of community engagement. He is convener of the Pacific Health Governance workshop and Research Network.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 6: Gina Barba with Erin McElroy

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, November  22nd, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below after the episode airs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

On August 24th, 2020, we spoke with Erin McElroy about housing justice, landlord tech and surveillance, and the role of AI in this new world shaped by the pandemic. McElroy earned their doctorate of Feminist Studies from UC Santa Cruz, and is now a postdoctoral researcher at New York University’s AI Now Institute. Due to the urban soundscape of New York City, we decided to edit out some of the segments from this Zoom interview that were important but too challenging to hear clearly, including McElroy’s introduction to the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project. In early 2021, SJRC will help McElroy celebrate the launch of the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project’s newly released book: Counterpoints: A San Francisco Bay Area Atlas of Displacement and Resistance, published by PM Press.

Guest Bio:

Erin McElroy is a postdoctoral researcher at New York University’s AI Now Institute, and cofounder of the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project. Erin earned a doctoral degree in Feminist Studies from the University of California, Santa Cruz, with a focus on the politics of space, race, and technology in Romania and Silicon Valley, and is an editor of Radical Housing Journal.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 5: Maryam Nazir with Rebecca DuBois

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, November 15th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below after the episode airs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome to the Pandemicene podcast! Today we speak with Dr. Rebecca DuBois, associate professor of Biomolecular Engineering at UC Santa Cruz. We ask her thoughts on the many issues involved in developing a COVID-19 vaccine, including the biological details of what a vaccine might look like and be capable of,  the necessary phases of clinical trials, and bioethical issues of equity and fairness that will arise during eventual vaccine distribution. Note that this interview was conducted on September 3rd, 2020, and much has changed over the past two months, including the U.S. political landscape and breakthroughs in vaccine development.

Guest Bio:

Rebecca DuBois is an associate professor of Biomolecular Engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She runs the DuBois Lab on campus, which seeks to understand the molecular mechanisms of virus infections, and to use this information to develop new vaccines and antiviral therapeutics.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.

Pandemicene Podcast, Episode 4: Gina Barba with Sharon Daniel

The Pandemicene Podcast aims to produce knowledge that can help all of us – scholars and scientists, students and activists – imagine and enact just futures both in our home state of California and in our communities worldwide.

Airing on KZSC Santa Cruz 88.1 FM, on Sunday, November 8th, 6:30 – 7 pm PST.

Link to the live stream, or listen below after the episode airs.

Welcome to the Pandemicene Podcast. Today we share a conversation with Professor Sharon Daniel, whose work has dramatically shifted in response to the pandemic.  Sharon Daniel is a professor of Film and Digital Media at UCSC. In addition to teaching at the university, Daniel also does research on various social justice issues in order to create interactive websites and other media projects for the general public. Her current work focuses on the criminal justice system and Indigenous communities in Alaska. She strives to give a platform to those historically marginalized. Daniel talks to us about what incarceration during the pandemic looks like and shares details on her newest project – Exposed – documenting COVID-19 in prisons and jails around the country. Visit the newly launched project site at unjustlyexposed.com!

Guest Bio:

Sharon Daniel is a Professor of Film & Digital Media at UC Santa Cruz, and a media artist who produces interactive and participatory documentaries focused on issues of social, economic, environmental and criminal justice. She builds online archives and interfaces that make the stories of marginalized and disenfranchised communities available across social, cultural and economic boundaries. Daniel’s most recent project – Exposed – documents the ravaging spread of COVID-19 through jails and prisons in the U.S. Detailed descriptions of Daniel’s works can be found at http://sharondaniel.net.

Additional Pandemicene Project Information

Find more information on the COVID-19 Pandemicene’s project page.

The SJRC has a robust network of local and international public health experts, scholars, and practitioners leading the way with collecting resources for teaching about COVID-19, writing open response letters, and calls to action, and organizing and participating in online events.