We talk about the expected overturn of federal abortion protections, and how this seismic shift in rights might just be the beginning.
We talk with a local game designer about the unique place video games have among art forms.
Today we’re continuing our discussion of productive disagreements, and we’re joined by Inga Laurent, Professor of Law at Gonzaga who studies, theorizes and helps implement restorative justice practices in court systems and outside of judicial settings like schools.
During Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month, a coalition of organizations pushes for disaggregation.
In the US, it’s supposed to be “innocent until proven guilty,” but it’s a routine part of our criminal legal system to imprison people while they await trial, causing them to lose their jobs, housing, access to transportation and more.
On this episode of Range of Care, we’re talking about productive disagreements: why we need them, what they look like and how to have them.
Happy birthday to us! Is that weird to say? We hope not because we’re excited to still be going strong a whole TWO years after Luke decided to start a podcast in his attic.
This week on the pod, we talk to Deb Conklin, former Clallam County Prosecutor and current pastor of two churches in Spokane, Liberty Park Methodist in Perry and St. Paul’s United Methodist in West Central.
Poet, Spark Central Executive Director and general purpose badass Brooke Matson joins Luke and special co-host Elissa Ball to discuss the historic (and current) stigma around ADHD
How in the world do we unpack from a pandemic? It's an important question during a profoundly important time as the world contemplates decisions that when made, will once again shift the ground beneath our feet.
If you’re about to be evicted in Washington state, what rights do you have?
Planning is extremely important to the life and health of a place — one of the most consequential things a local government does — the impacts of which usually outlive the people doing the planning by generations.