loader from loading.io

VI: Imagining 2061

81/61

Release Date: 08/02/2021

VI: Imagining 2061 show art VI: Imagining 2061

81/61

What do we want our region's headline to be? Will we leave the potential gains from closing racial disparities on the table?

info_outline
V: Wealth Creation show art V: Wealth Creation

81/61

Entrepreneurship is a crucial wealth building strategy, but how accessible is it to most people? 81/61 explores the stories of how several Black female entrepreneurs got their starts.

info_outline
IV: Race or Labor Relations? show art IV: Race or Labor Relations?

81/61

According to Dick Pogue, the Roundtable’s efforts to improve relations between labor and management was its greatest success. Using archival cassette tape of Frank Valenta of the United Steelworkers, we ask: how was this related to the Roundtable’s goal of inclusion?

info_outline
III: American Dream to American Nightmare show art III: American Dream to American Nightmare

81/61

The early 1980s marked the beginning of a new trend: wage and wealth stagnation for the bottom 50 percent of workers. Learn about why Carole Hoover urges us to have serious conversations about opportunity.

info_outline
II: Race Relations in 1981 show art II: Race Relations in 1981

81/61

Was the Roundtable an effort to fight the root causes of inequity, or just an attempt to keep racial unrest in Cleveland out of the headlines? We uncover a seminal study of Cleveland’s racial disparities and how Roundtable members like Mayor George Voinovich reacted.

info_outline
I: No Seat at the Table show art I: No Seat at the Table

81/61

Cleveland’s accelerating racial division in the 1960s and economic slide in the 1970s inspired CEOs from Eaton, Standard Oil, TRW, and others to create a new civic consensus. Hear about how Cleveland’s default sparked an effort that aimed to include folks of color.

info_outline
81/61, Coming June 7th show art 81/61, Coming June 7th

81/61

It’s 1981. Reagan was just inaugurated. Cleveland is emerging from default. We're reeling from manufacturing losses and racial division.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

What do we want our region's headline to be? Will we leave the potential gains from closing racial disparities on the table?