Description
In this podcast episode, we explore how neighborhoods and the policies that govern those communities can reveal long-standing issues of racism within our society. Our guest, Dr. Odis Johnson, Jr. from Johns Hopkins University, is an expert in multiple fields, including health policy, education, and sociology. Dr. Johnson helps us understand how these issues have led to ongoing inequalities, particularly for marginalized communities. We discuss how past discriminatory policies still impact us today and why we need significant changes in our systems. Dr. Johnson also explains how these policies affect the quality of schools in different neighborhoods and their impact on students' success.
References
Johnson Jr. O, Jabbari J. Suspended While Black in Majority White Schools: Implications for Math Efficacy and Equity. The Educational Forum. November 2021.
Johnson Jr. O. Exogenous Policy, Racial Avoidance, and the Qualified Relevance of Macroeconomic Change to Metropolitan Inequality. Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education. May 2022.
-| The Health Equity Podcast Channel is made possible with support from Bayer G4A. Learn more about how Bayer G4A is advancing equity, access and sustainability at G4a.health
-| This episode originally aired on October 3, 2023 on Aging Fast & Slow. Listen, follow and subscribe here.
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