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Roots and Futures in Sheffield: Growing Heritage Around Communities

Recovering Community

Release Date: 10/04/2024

Understanding Racism, Transforming University Cultures - Les Back and Professor Patricia Hill Collins in Conversation show art Understanding Racism, Transforming University Cultures - Les Back and Professor Patricia Hill Collins in Conversation

Recovering Community

Welcome back to Recovering Community. In a special bonus episode, Les Back meet world-renowned sociologist Professor Patricia Hill Collins, Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in Sociology, University of Maryland College Park, and the Charles Phelps Taft Professor Emerita of African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati. Professor Collins visited Glasgow on 14 October, 2024, to give the University's inaugural Racial Justice Lecture.  This was the first event in a new series of public lectures which has been established through the University’s Understanding Racism,...

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Roots and Futures in Sheffield: Growing Heritage Around Communities show art Roots and Futures in Sheffield: Growing Heritage Around Communities

Recovering Community

For this special bonus edition of Recovering Community, Les Back travels south of the border, to Sheffield to look at how rethinking the relationship between heritage and local communities can make them more inclusive, particularly for the most marginalised.   Here, the Roots and Futures project is listening to the perspectives of under-served communities, particularly Sheffield's Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities in seven locations across the city.    The project is informing city-level heritage strategies in partnership with Joined Up Heritage Sheffield,...

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We See You: Exploring the links between violence, homelessness and the drug economy in Scotland show art We See You: Exploring the links between violence, homelessness and the drug economy in Scotland

Recovering Community

Les Back meets with Dr Susan Batchelor, Dr Caitlin Gormley and Jim Thomson to learn more about a new piece of research exploring repeat violence in Scotland. To be homeless is more than not having a roof over your head.  It is also about a denial of being, a person out of place to look away from, to ignore and not make eye contact with them as you pass busily through Glasgow's Central Station.  The numbers of people living precariously in the city is increasing (a recent article in the Glasgow Herald says they have doubled recently).  This is a story of a deep crisis not only in...

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The Museum of Discomfort: How Glasgow’s Hunterian is Decolonising through its Collection show art The Museum of Discomfort: How Glasgow’s Hunterian is Decolonising through its Collection

Recovering Community

Les Back visits the Hunterian Museum at the University of Glasgow to talk about history, and how it impacts our lives and relationships in the 21st century. He meets with Hunterian Curator of Discomfort Zandra Yeaman and Dr Jay Sarkar to learn more about why history is so important when it comes to meaningful and respectful connection and cohabitation.  Glasgow is famous for its museums and galleries - from The Burrell Collection in the Southside, to Kelvingrove in the West End. But as you wander around these grand, serene places, do you ever think about how these traces of the past got...

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The Soup'erheroes: Fostering Food Solidarity in Castlemilk show art The Soup'erheroes: Fostering Food Solidarity in Castlemilk

Recovering Community

Les Back swaps his desk for the kitchen table as he travels to Castlemilk in the south of Glasgow to meet a group of remarkable women working together to feed their community. Is there a more powerful symbol of community than the soup pot?  It is both a distinctive part of Scottish working-class experience and at the same time a universal ritual of solidarity in hard times. Eating a home cooked meal is a kind of communion with others.  But what happens to a family, or even a whole society, when the basic necessity of food is out of reach? The huge demand on food banks in recent years...

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Is Wasteland Ever Wasted? Looking beyond the developer’s view; how brownfield sites add value to the cityscape show art Is Wasteland Ever Wasted? Looking beyond the developer’s view; how brownfield sites add value to the cityscape

Recovering Community

In this episode of Recovering Community, Les Back climbs through a hole in a fence to get right to the foundations of urban life. He meets with Dr Ross Beveridge, and artists Mary Redmond and Jim Colquhoun to talk about the landscape of the city, how it’s valued, and who gets to value it.  The story of Glasgow’s mixed fortunes is written into its built environment - from the confident grandeur of its Victorian monuments, to the once futuristic, now flaking edifices of post war modernism, to the new smoked glass and steel developments promising growth, longevity and perhaps - with some...

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The Wellbeing Economy: rethinking traditional economic structures to benefit people and planet show art The Wellbeing Economy: rethinking traditional economic structures to benefit people and planet

Recovering Community

What does it take to reconfigure our traditional capitalist economic structures so that people, communities and the environment come before profit? That’s the question at the heart of the wellbeing economy movement and the subject of today’s episode. Gerard McCartney practiced as a GP and trained as an economist before his current role as Professor of Wellbeing Economy at the University of Glasgow. Gerry’s work explores the connections between health outcomes, community, and our working and living environments.  Gerry and Anne talk to Dr Katherine Trebeck, a political economist and...

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Coming Back: How Vox Liminis uses creative responses to the criminal justice system to build community show art Coming Back: How Vox Liminis uses creative responses to the criminal justice system to build community

Recovering Community

How do you build community after the criminal justice system has removed you from society to serve a prison sentence?   Today’s episode of Recovering Community explores the work of Vox Liminis, a unique organisation, set up to find creative answers to questions about crime, punishment, reintegration, and community. Vox is for people who have all kinds of experiences of criminal justice; from children with parents in prison, to academic researchers and social workers. It hosts a number of projects from its base in Glasgow’s Gallowgate, and in prisons across Scotland. Anne Kerr...

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Colombia River Stories: The symbiotic relationship between the Río Atrato and the community who call it home show art Colombia River Stories: The symbiotic relationship between the Río Atrato and the community who call it home

Recovering Community

The 400 mile long Río Atrato is in the Chocó department of northwest Colombia. Chocó is one of the most ethnically diverse regions in the country. It’s also one of the poorest, and the river provides essential transport and economic opportunities to the residents.

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Communities, Identity and Borders: What does the Kenmure Street Protest tell us about belonging to Glasgow? show art Communities, Identity and Borders: What does the Kenmure Street Protest tell us about belonging to Glasgow?

Recovering Community

This episode of Recovering Community begins with the Kenmure Street Protest, when community resistance to a Home Office raid resulted in the release of two men back into their neighbourhood.

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For this special bonus edition of Recovering Community, Les Back travels south of the border, to Sheffield to look at how rethinking the relationship between heritage and local communities can make them more inclusive, particularly for the most marginalised.  

Here, the Roots and Futures project is listening to the perspectives of under-served communities, particularly Sheffield's Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities in seven locations across the city.   

The project is informing city-level heritage strategies in partnership with Joined Up Heritage Sheffield, Sheffield City Council, University of Sheffield, and community partners including Zest, SOAR, Sheffield and District African Caribbean Community Association, Care for Young People’s Future, ChilyPep, Manor and Castle Development Trust, and Heeley City Farm. This all might seem like a long way from Glasgow but Roots and Futures is part of the AHRC’s Place-Based Research Programme which is based at the University of Glasgow.   

People rooted in local communities are absolutely essential to this kind of co-production and Les spends time with just a few of the people involved in this ambitious project:

Aisha Jones has lived in Sheffield for over 20 years and is a dedicated community volunteer

Lizzy Craig-Atkins is Professor of Human Osteology at the University of Sheffield and the principal investigator of Roots and Futures. 

Rhonda Allen, is a Research Associate in the Roots and Futures Project in the DSchool of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities, Faculty of Arts and Humanities 

Izzy Carter is a historian and the co-investigator of Roots and Futures. Much of her work is connected to place and working with communities. 

And Robin Hughes, who is a trustee of Joined Up Heritage Sheffield

Many thanks to them all for sharing their time and expertise. Find out more about Roots and Futures here

https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/archaeology/roots-and-futures

 

We’re already working on plans for our next episodes, but your feedback, comments and questions are always so welcome. You can get in touch with Les via X https://x.com/AcademicDiary

If you’re interested in podcasting as part of your academic research, please do share your work or what you’re listening to, we are interested to hear what other people are working on.

Thanks to the staff in the School of Social and Political Sciences and the College of Social Sciences who helped with this project.

Recovering Community is produced by Freya Hellier.