『Hope Mississippi』のカバーアート

Hope Mississippi

Hope Mississippi

著者: Dawn Beam
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A bimonthly podcast educating Mississippians about the needs of fellow citizens, encouraging residents to work together to change the trajectory of our families and children, and sharing success stories.

© 2025 Dawn Beam
マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ 社会科学 経済学
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  • When Systems See People, Hope Rises
    2025/12/01

    The numbers are stark—one in four kids in poverty, one in five facing food insecurity—but statistics don’t tell you how hope returns. Lorie’s story does. Meet a former nurse who lost custody of her daughter, lived unsheltered for years, and spiraled into meth‑induced delusion. When hope seemed lost, an auto burglary charge became the unlikely doorway to drug court, where structure, compassion, and accountability helped her reclaim stability, voice, and purpose.

    We walk through each step with Lorie: growing up as the eldest in a single‑parent home, an untreated ADHD diagnosis that came too late, and a teen eating disorder that morphed into alcoholism. When background checks stalled her nursing license, stress and shame compounded. She turned to meth to outrun alcohol, then to the streets where danger and access fed the cycle.

    A compassionate judge paused before shipping her off to prison and asked: Would you try drug court? That invitation changed everything. Housing support, clear expectations, regular testing, and a bench that listened turned punishment into a pathway. Lorie even faced a relapse with honesty, and the court responded with consequences and continued care rather than abandonment.

    We talk candidly about CPS', “reasonable efforts,” and how trauma‑informed courts can protect children while preserving a parent’s humanity. Lorie names what works: judges who see people, programs that treat addiction as a disease, and communities that stay close enough to hold you accountable and cheer you on.

    Today Lorie is working in private care, appealing for nursing license restoration, and advocating for others to get the help she once lacked. If you care about addiction recovery, drug court, child welfare, and second chances in Mississippi, this conversation offers practical insight and a real reason to believe.

    If this moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us what hope looks like in your community. Your voice helps more stories like Lorie’s be heard.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    29 分
  • MS State Bar 7 - Justice | Faith | Rural Renewal
    2025/11/15

    At the 2025 Mississippi Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam sat down with more than twenty leaders in law, policy, and public service—capturing three days of extraordinary conversations for a special seven-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is Part Seven, the final installment in this series until 2026. Meet us in Biloxi!

    What does hope look like inside a justice system? It looks like a judge protecting a child’s settlement. It looks like a high school student arguing a case from memory with confidence and grace. It looks like a prosecutor praying with a family before trial and still fighting for accountability. In this episode, we sit down with attorney Kye C. Handy and prosecutor Ian Baker to explore the moments that turn curiosity into a calling—and a calling into service.

    Kye C. Handy invites us into her path from Jackson to private practice, guided by female judges who modeled excellence and care. She pulls back the curtain on the Young Lawyers Division: HBCU outreach, statewide mock trial, and pro bono efforts that meet real needs. If you’ve ever wondered how to spark the next generation of advocates, you’ll hear a practical blueprint: show up in classrooms, bring students into courtrooms, and say yes to the small invitations that lead to big changes.

    Ian Baker shares how faith informs his work without softening his resolve. Accountability and compassion can coexist when victims’ voices are honored and defendants are treated as people. He reflects on career pivots, a family rooted in public service, and why Mississippi offers space for anyone to lead boldly. Together we confront an urgent challenge—the rural lawyer shortage—and outline collaborative fixes so wills, guardianships, and small business needs don’t require a long drive and a longer wait.

    If you care about justice, youth opportunities, or community leadership, this episode offers a grounded and hopeful roadmap. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s considering law school or small-town practice, and leave a review to help more Mississippians find their path to serve.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    24 分
  • MS State Bar 6 - “How Many Kids Did You Jail Today?”
    2025/11/01

    At the 2025 Mississippi Bar Convention, former State Supreme Court Justice Dawn Beam sat down with more than twenty leaders in law, policy, and public service—capturing three days of extraordinary conversations for a special seven-part series of her Hope Mississippi podcast. This is Part Six of Seven.

    What does it really take to keep kids safe and families whole when poverty, addiction, and untreated mental illness pull them apart? In this episode, we begin with Judge Walt Brown of Adams County, then move into candid, heart-level discussions with family law attorney Jeremy McNinch and former Mississippi Bar President Blake Teller. Together, they trace a line from the youth court bench to private practice, showing how hope isn’t abstract—it’s built daily through practical tools, patient relationships, and courageous choices.

    Judge Brown opens the curtain on youth court’s real center of gravity—neglect, not delinquency—and exposes the everyday obstacles most people never see: no car to reach court, no childcare for class, no path out of generational poverty. He shares how a local coalition extends treatment beyond a thirty-day stopgap and why peer-support specialists transform outcomes by walking alongside families between hearings, answering late-night texts, and speaking truth as people who’ve lived it. He also faces the most challenging question head-on: when does a child’s stability require severing parental rights—and who will step forward to love, and then let go?

    With Jeremy McNinch, the lens shifts to family law's emotional and spiritual weight. He reveals why listening can be as powerful as litigating, how faith steadies families in crisis, and why leaving the door open to resolution often heals more than courtroom brinkmanship ever could.

    Finally, Blake Teller widens the view to the profession—the Mississippi Bar’s renewed focus on civility, mentorship, and closing rural justice deserts through law-school outreach and internships that lead young lawyers into small-town practice. Expect grounded wisdom and actionable hope: fund a treatment program, mentor a struggling parent, consider foster care, or—if you’re a lawyer or student—bring your skills to a Mississippi community that needs you most.

    Subscribe, share this conversation with a friend who cares about kids and communities, and leave a review with one action you’ll take to spread hope where you live.

    Join us for new episodes on the 1st and 15th of each month as we continue sharing stories of transformation from across Mississippi. Each story reminds us that when we contribute our unique gifts, Mississippi rises together.

    Hope Mississippi's Mission: The sobering reality remains: one in four Mississippi children lives in poverty, and one in five experiences food insecurity. These statistics aren't just numbers—they're our collective challenge. Through these conversations, we discover that Mississippi's transformation occurs through individual commitments to mentor, encourage, and be present for others. The small acts of hope accumulate into the broader "miracles" we celebrate.

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    35 分
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