
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In a new Brookings Institute commentary, experts explain why they believe Atlanta is not the blueprint for public safety reform. Through their analysis, they make the comparison to policing in Baltimore and St. Louis to highlight what does and doesn’t work, particularly following the creation of the heavily protested Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, also known to critics as ‘Cop City.’ Ali Sewell, a sociology professor at Emory University, and Keon Gilbert, a fellow at The Brookings Institution in governance studies and a professor of public health at Saint Louis University, talk more about their report.
Elisabeth Omilami, the daughter of the late civil rights leaders Juanita and Hosea Williams, is a longtime actor, humanitarian and civil rights activist. She currently serves as the president of Hosea Feed the Hungry and Homeless. For “Closer Look’s” Women’s History Month series, “Piloting the Journey,” Omilami reflects on her journey and talks more about her ongoing efforts to combat hunger and poverty.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4.5
4747 ratings
In a new Brookings Institute commentary, experts explain why they believe Atlanta is not the blueprint for public safety reform. Through their analysis, they make the comparison to policing in Baltimore and St. Louis to highlight what does and doesn’t work, particularly following the creation of the heavily protested Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, also known to critics as ‘Cop City.’ Ali Sewell, a sociology professor at Emory University, and Keon Gilbert, a fellow at The Brookings Institution in governance studies and a professor of public health at Saint Louis University, talk more about their report.
Elisabeth Omilami, the daughter of the late civil rights leaders Juanita and Hosea Williams, is a longtime actor, humanitarian and civil rights activist. She currently serves as the president of Hosea Feed the Hungry and Homeless. For “Closer Look’s” Women’s History Month series, “Piloting the Journey,” Omilami reflects on her journey and talks more about her ongoing efforts to combat hunger and poverty.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
38,649 Listeners
3,896 Listeners
90,844 Listeners
38,190 Listeners
8,246 Listeners
6,668 Listeners
14,537 Listeners
4,611 Listeners
111,746 Listeners
56,180 Listeners
8,925 Listeners
23,706 Listeners
147 Listeners
2,335 Listeners
338 Listeners
15,977 Listeners
170 Listeners
277 Listeners
19 Listeners
58 Listeners
6 Listeners
9 Listeners
15 Listeners
17 Listeners
14 Listeners
5 Listeners
6 Listeners
5 Listeners
6 Listeners
19 Listeners
26 Listeners
140 Listeners
1,512 Listeners
79 Listeners