『Waging Love』のカバーアート

Waging Love

Waging Love

著者: Tim Harper
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概要

Waging Love is a documentary podcast examining the systems that shape early care and education — and the people who sustain it.


This series explores how race, gender, labor, policy, and power intersect in the field of care. From Indigenous knowledge systems to Black caregiving traditions, from immigrant labor to the positioning of white women in early education, Waging Love asks difficult questions about how care became undervalued — and who carries its weight.


Blending research, storytelling, and reflective analysis, this podcast moves beyond surface-level workforce conversations to examine governance, hegemony, belonging, and the politics of care.

This is not a podcast about a “shortage.”


It is a podcast about structure.


And about what it would mean to fund love as infrastructure.

© 2026 Waging Love
エピソード
  • Ep. 3 Who Decides What Care Is Worth
    2026/02/14

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    Why does evidence not become accountability? This episode introduces hegemony and intersectionality to explain how exploitation becomes common sense — and why reform often stabilizes the very structure it claims to change. The workforce crisis is not a labor problem alone. It is a governance problem.


    Works & Scholars Referenced

    Toni Morrison — “A Humanist View” (1975); Playing in the Dark (1992)

    Ruha Benjamin — Race After Technology (2019)

    Kimberlé Crenshaw — “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” (1989)

    Antonio Gramsci — Selections from the Prison Notebooks

    Audre Lorde — “The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House” (1979)

    Christine L. Williams — “The Glass Escalator” (1992)

    Stuart Hall — “The Problem of Ideology” (1986)

    Lea J.E. Austin — CSCCE racial wage gap and workforce research


    Films & Documentaries

    I Am Not Your Negro (2016)

    Inequality for All (2013)

    The Take (2004)

    Make A Circle (2025) — Early childhood educators organizing for structural reform


    You can find the full transcript, citations, and extended reading list at waginglove.org

    If this work feels necessary to you, subscribe to the podcast so you don’t miss what comes next.

    And if you believe care deserves structural accountability, consider sharing this episode with someone who shapes policy, works in early childhood, or depends on it.

    Care has always been here.

    The question is whether we will finally build a system that protects the people who provide it.

    Support the show

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    53 分
  • Ep. 2 Care Was Removed, Not Lost
    2026/02/09

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    This episode traces how care was distributed and governed across race and gender. Indigenous care was removed. Black care was extracted. Latina care governed through precarity. Asian American and Pacific Islander care governed through invisibility and aggregation. Immigrant care governed through legal vulnerability. White women positioned as stabilizers. Men — especially white men — closest to power and furthest from daily care. Care did not randomize. It followed governance.


    Works & Scholars Referenced

    bell hooks — Teaching to Transgress (1994)

    Gloria Anzaldúa — Borderlands/La Frontera (1987)

    Grace Lee Boggs — The Next American Revolution (2011)

    Peggy McIntosh — “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” (1989)

    Maurice Sykes — Doing the Right Thing for Children (2013)

    Chrishana Lloyd et al. — Mary Pauper: A Historical Exploration of Early Care and Education Compensation, Policy, and Solutions (Child Trends, 2022)

    Leah Austin — National Black Child Development Institute leadership

    Lea J.E. Austin — CSCCE workforce equity research


    Films & Documentaries

    13th (2016) — Criminalization and racial hierarchy

    Asian Americans (PBS, 2020) — Immigration and racial formation

    Who We Are (2021) — Structural racism in law

    Make A Circle (2025) — PBS documentary following early childhood educators organizing for dignity, compensation, and systemic reform

    Reflecting on Anti-Bias Education in Action: The Early Years (2021) — Produced by Debbie LeeKeenan & John Nimmo; anti-bias practice in early childhood classrooms

    We Still Live Here – Âs Nutayuneân (2011) — Wampanoag language revitalization

    Language Is Life (PBS, 2023) — Indigenous language revitalization across tribal communities

    Make A Circle (2025) — PBS documentary following early childhood educators organizing for dignity, compensation, and systemic reform

    Support the show

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    2 時間 15 分
  • Ep. 1 When Love Becomes Policy
    2026/02/07

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    Early care and education in the United States is not a single system. It is a fragmented patchwork built across colonization, slavery, gendered labor norms, immigration policy, and market ideology. What looks like a workforce crisis is not accidental — it is structural. This episode traces how care became a market instead of a public good, how professionalization reshaped whose knowledge counted, and why sacrifice became embedded in the field’s identity.


    Works & Scholars Referenced

    Audre Lorde — The Cancer Journals (1980); Sister Outsider (1984); A Burst of Light (1988)

    Robin Wall Kimmerer — Braiding Sweetgrass (2013)

    Gloria Ladson-Billings — “Toward a Theory of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy” (1995)

    Arundhati Roy — “The Pandemic Is a Portal” (2020)

    Ai-jen Poo — The Age of Dignity (2015)

    Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers — They Were Her Property (2019)

    Thavolia Glymph — Out of the House of Bondage (2008)

    Lea J.E. Austin — Early Childhood Workforce Index (CSCCE, 2024)


    Films & Documentaries

    Dawnland (2018) — Indigenous child removal and sovereignty

    Stamped from the Beginning (2023) — Racism in U.S. history

    The Big Payback (2023) — Reparations and structural inequality


    You can find the full transcript, citations, and extended reading list at waginglove.org

    If this work feels necessary to you, subscribe to the podcast so you don’t miss what comes next.

    And if you believe care deserves structural accountability, consider sharing this episode with someone who shapes policy, works in early childhood, or depends on it.

    Care has always been here.

    The question is whether we will finally build a system that protects the people who provide it.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    56 分
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