Shennette Garrett-Scott on Black Women in Finance

Shennette Garrett-Scott on Black Women in Finance

In this episode, Shennette Garrett-Scott explores black financial innovation and its transformative impact on U.S. capitalism through the story of the St. Luke Bank in Richmond, Virginia: the first and only bank run by black women. Garrett-Scott chronicles both the bank's success and the challenges this success wrought, including shedding light on the bureaucratic violence that targeted St. Luke's and other black banks. Through the St. Luke Bank, Garrett-Scott gives black women in finance the attention they deserve.

Episoder(125)

Steve James on Abacus Bank

Steve James on Abacus Bank

It has become well known that none of those most responsible for the 2008 recession have faced significant prosecutions or gone to prison for their actions. But one bank did face a severe prosecution ...

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Emily Hobson on the Gay and Lesbian Left

Emily Hobson on the Gay and Lesbian Left

We often talk about "economic conservatism" and "social conservatism," as if they're entirely divorced topics. Emily Hobson tells us about gay and lesbian activists from the 1960s through the 1990s wh...

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Nancy MacLean on the Radical Right and James Buchanan

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In Nancy MacLean's new book—Democracy in Chains—she unveils a long history of efforts by right-wing officials and intellectuals to undermine democracy. She foregrounds the importance of the economist ...

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Kim Phillips-Fein on the Fiscal Crisis and Austerity Politics in New York City

Kim Phillips-Fein on the Fiscal Crisis and Austerity Politics in New York City

Why do budgetary crises tend to lead to politicians and business leaders calling for governments to tighten their purse strings? How can we understand austerity as politics, not just common business s...

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Geoff Mann on the Keynesian Sensibility in a World of Ecological and Economic Inequality

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The name John Maynard Keynes is an important one in the history of economic thought. Keynes's ideas became popular between during the interwar period, between World War I and II, as many sought to nav...

1 Mai 201753min

Jennifer Haigh on Fiction and Fracking

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In our first interview with a novelist, we speak with Jennifer Haigh about Heat & Light, her novel about fracking in rural Pennsylvania.

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Ryan Murphy on Flight Attendant Activism

Ryan Murphy on Flight Attendant Activism

The 1980s were a time of transformation for workers across the U.S., and flight attendants were on the front line of the struggles of the era, as they saw the impacts of deregulation, the breaking of ...

5 Mar 201739min

Mehrsa Baradaran on Banking for Lower Income Americans

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How does the fact that banks do not have to make their services accessible for all of us impact ordinary people? Why should we see banks as institutions that must be accountable to the public, and wha...

1 Feb 201742min

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