Épisodes

  • Healing Together
    Nov 19 2025
    Healing Together features Domenique Harmon, a passionate advocate for mental health awareness and workers’ rights. Domenique shares how her experiences in the cannabis industry, mental health spaces, and UFCW have shaped her professional journey and personal path to healing. *Please note, this episode contains references to child abuse, suicide, and war.* To read the UCLA Labor Center’s report on cannabis workers, please visit bit.ly/uclacannabisreport. To learn more about The Amazing Movement, please visit www.theamazingmovement.com or @theamazingmovement on Instagram.
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    29 min
  • Re:Work presents ”The Shifting Immigrant Hustle” (from Feet in 2 Worlds)
    Aug 14 2025
    Today we are sharing an episode from our friends at Feet in 2 Worlds, an independent media outlet and journalism training program that empowers the voices of immigrant journalists. We hear from women who work at the intersection of labor and immigration, including our own Labor Center director Saba Waheed. These women discuss the most pressing threats to immigrant workers, as well as the ways immigrants can resist and also support one another. This episode is a part of a Feet in 2 Worlds series called The Hustle, which focuses on the ways immigrants navigate a changing economy — today and throughout history. To learn more about Feet in 2 Worlds, please visit fi2w.org.
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    28 min
  • Re:Work and the IRLE present ”The Reality of Workers and Learners – A Personal Story”
    Jun 26 2025
    Today we are bringing you a piece produced by Ritika Sarma and Jimmy Mancilla, students in UCLA’s Labor Summer Research Program (LSRP). The piece is part of a larger 3-part series, “The Reality of Workers and Learners,” which examines the challenges faced by student workers, many of whom work over 20 hours a week. The episode opens with brief remarks by Lucero Herrera, a senior research analyst at the UCLA Labor Center and LSRP instructor. To listen to the rest of the series, please visit youtube.com/uclalabor. To visit the website LSRP students created, visit bit.ly/4k9G9ui
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    29 min
  • Re:Work and the IRLE present ”May Day”
    May 15 2025
    In honor of May Day 2025, Victor Narro, project director at the UCLA Labor Center and career organizer, joined Tobias Higbie, UCLA IRLE Director and professor of labor and history, for a conversation on the significance of May Day in Los Angeles. They discuss how May Day unites diverse coalitions to engage in a powerful act of collective resistance, share an inside look at the process of planning major direct action campaigns, and provide expert tips on how to maintain a sustainable career in social justice work. You can also watch their conversation on the IRLE's YouTube channel @UCLA-IRLE
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    45 min
  • Re:Work presents Código Doméstico, Part Two
    Mar 31 2025

    In this episode, we bring you two more stories from Código Doméstico that have been translated into English. Código Doméstico is a podcast produced by Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero. It aims to expose working conditions for women hired as cleaners through apps in Central and South America as well as the US.

    At the heart of this show is deep listening and fostering collaborations to fight for the dignity of workers in the digital platform economy. Today’s episode features stories from Paola and Giselle.

    To listen to the original Código Doméstico podcast episodes, and to learn more about the broader project, please visit codigodomestico.com. You can also listen on Spotify: bit.ly/codigodomestico

    To read the related research by Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero, please visit bit.ly/codigodomesticoreport

    Episode Art: Jessi (top left) by Priscila Barbosa, instagram.com/priii_barbosa Roxy (top right) by Marisol Rivera, instagram.com/mar___rivera Paola (bottom left) by Saro Agustina, instagram.com/saroagustina Giselle (bottom right) by Day Cuervo, instagram.com/daycuervo

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    20 min
  • Re:Work presents Código Doméstico, Part One
    Mar 24 2025

    We bring you two stories from Código Doméstico that have been translated into English. Código Doméstico is a podcast produced by Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero. It aims to expose working conditions for women hired as cleaners through apps in Central and South America, as well as the US.

    At the heart of this show is deep listening and fostering collaborations to fight for the dignity of workers in the digital platform economy. This episode features stories from Roxy and Jessi.

    To listen to the original Código Doméstico podcast episodes, and to learn more about the broader project, please visit codigodomestico.com. You can also listen on Spotify.

    To read the related research by Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero, please visit bit.ly/codigodomesticoreport

    Episode Art: Jessi (left) by Priscila Barbosa Roxy (right) by Marisol Rivera

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    22 min
  • Beyond the Glass Wall
    Feb 10 2025

    These days, we hear more and more about burnout, as well as rising anxiety levels, particularly in light of the recent presidential transition. How do we want to think about burnout, anxiety, and the emotional and mental load we carry when working in the social justice sector — especially when you have a personal connection to what you’re fighting for?

    In this episode, Ainee Athar shares her immigration challenges and journey into advocating for immigrant rights, as well as her experiences with burnout and her pivot to climate justice.

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    28 min
  • Re:Work presents "Disclose! Divest!: Behind the Fight Over College Endowments" (from Making Contact)
    Dec 5 2024

    We’re closing out the year with an episode from our friends at Making Contact:

    As graduation approached this year, students around the country began protests after calls for divestment from Israel were initially ignored by university leadership. The campus encampments were met with physical violence and the mainstream press dismissed the students’ demands as naive and immature. But, it turns out that there’s a lot we should be asking about college endowments.

    We take a look at what an endowment is and how they’re invested. Then we learn why transparency around the endowment (and divestment!) might actually benefit the entire college community.

    We talk to Kelly Grotke, a financial researcher from Pattern Recognition, a research collective focused on financialized higher education. And, with Andrea Pritchett, we look at the links between the encampments today, and those from the 80s, when students protested South African Apartheid.

    Episode Credits:

    Host: Salima Hamirani Producers: Anita Johnson, Salima Hamirani, Amy Gastelum, and Lucy Kang Executive Director: Jina Chung Editor: Adwoa Gyimah-Brempong Engineer: Jeff Emtman Digital Media Marketing: Anubhuti Kumar

    Learn more about Making Contact

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    30 min