UpFront

‘No one should die for lack of care’ Ady Barkan on the fight for universal healthcare; Plus: Albert Woodfox on more than 40 years in solitary

0:08 – Ady Barkan is a social justice activist who has built three programs at The Center for Popular Democracy: the Be A Hero and Fed Up campaigns and the Local Progress network. He was a law clerk to the Hon. Shira A. Scheindlin in the Southern District of New York and prior to that he was a Liman Fellow with Make the Road New York, where he represented low-wage workers seeking to recover unpaid wages and obtain safe and dignified working conditions. He graduated from Yale Law School and Columbia College. He lives with his wife Rachael and their two young children in Santa Barbara, California. Eyes to the Wind is a memoir and his first book.

0:22 – Vivian Ho is a journalist who has written for the San Francisco Chronicle, the Guardian, Topic and the Boston Globe. Her first book is Those Who Wander: America’s Lost Street Kids.

0:55 – KPFA’s Richard Wolinsky reviews Pride and Prejudice now showing at Theatreworks Palo Alto through Saturday January 4th.

1:08 – Albert Woodfox – for the hour – served more than 40 years in solitary confinement in Angola State Prison in Louisiana – the longest period of solitary confinement in US prison history. In 2014, his conviction was overturned, and in 2016 he was released. He joins us now, to talk about his experience, and his new memoir Solitary.

Playlist

Artist Song Album Label
The XXIntro - introXXYoung Turks
Trombone ShortyHurricane SeasonBackatownUniversal Music

Leave a Reply