
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Critical Race Theory is at the heart of some of today’s most fiery culture wars, but does it deserve the heat? We are joined by scholar, teacher, and advocate Joshua Sealy-Harrington to discuss the many nuances of CRT. Josh is an Assistant Professor at Toronto Metropolitan University’s Lincoln Alexander School of Law, and Counsel at Power Law. Josh’s expertise in critical race theory, critical disability theory, feminist legal theory, queer legal theory, criminal punishment, constitutional law, as well as law and social movements makes him one of the most insightful speakers in Canada today on this topic. Listen for a breakdown of what CRT is, what it’s limitations are, and what issues it aims to address in mainstream society.
Josh: https://twitter.com/joshuasealy
Website: https://www.pullback.org/episode-notes/108
Harbinger Media Network: https://harbingermedianetwork.com/join
5
44 ratings
Critical Race Theory is at the heart of some of today’s most fiery culture wars, but does it deserve the heat? We are joined by scholar, teacher, and advocate Joshua Sealy-Harrington to discuss the many nuances of CRT. Josh is an Assistant Professor at Toronto Metropolitan University’s Lincoln Alexander School of Law, and Counsel at Power Law. Josh’s expertise in critical race theory, critical disability theory, feminist legal theory, queer legal theory, criminal punishment, constitutional law, as well as law and social movements makes him one of the most insightful speakers in Canada today on this topic. Listen for a breakdown of what CRT is, what it’s limitations are, and what issues it aims to address in mainstream society.
Josh: https://twitter.com/joshuasealy
Website: https://www.pullback.org/episode-notes/108
Harbinger Media Network: https://harbingermedianetwork.com/join
90,844 Listeners
14,771 Listeners
175 Listeners
12,088 Listeners
86,615 Listeners
111,827 Listeners
84 Listeners
15,298 Listeners
418 Listeners
2,201 Listeners
523 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
4 Listeners
72 Listeners