『Words, Wages, and Where to Go』のカバーアート

Words, Wages, and Where to Go

Words, Wages, and Where to Go

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
At women’s centres across rural Nova Scotia, staff are asked to be everything at once: advocate, crisis worker, housing navigator, grant writer, and sometimes the only safe door in town. They support women and gender-diverse people navigating violence, poverty, isolation, and impossible choices—often while running entire centres on what amounts to a single person’s salary.In this episode, host Alex sits down with Cora Cole, coordinator of Women’s Centres Connect, the provincial association representing nine women’s centres across Nova Scotia. Since the late 1980s, Connect has acted as the “glue” between grassroots centres—amplifying their collective voice, pushing back on harmful policies, and fighting for sustainable funding so rural communities aren’t left behind. From transportation deserts and fixed-term leases to waitlists for grief counselling and basic hygiene supplies, Cora lays bare what it means to hold an entire social safety net together with limited resources and unlimited need.Together, they explore how language, money, and mobility shape women’s real options when it comes to safety. They discuss:Why calling gender‑based violence an epidemic misses the point—and why recognizing it as endemic forces us to confront decades of inactionHow “softening” words like rape into more palatable terms can dull public understanding and hide the true impact of violenceThe invisible price of leaving: from $175 cab rides out of rural communities to food deserts where the gas station is the only source of “groceries”How underfunding and short-term project grants pit women’s centres and shelters against each other, turning collaboration into competitionThe emotional toll of endlessly reframing obvious needs—like a provincial outreach coordinator—into funder‑friendly language, only to be denied anywayWhat “one door, any reason” really looks like on the ground, and why a woman might first show up for a backpack, a fax, or a knitting group long before she discloses violenceThe role of intergenerational trauma, wage inequality, and the gig economy in keeping people trapped in unsafe situations with nowhere to goFrom the politics of naming gender‑based violence to the practical realities of running a women’s centre on a shoestring, Cora reveals how words, wages, and the basic question of “where can I go?” shape the lives of women and families across the province—and what’s at stake when the only door in a community is forced to do more with less, year after year.At the end of the episode, you’ll hear how the One Door project aims to bring these wraparound supports under one roof—creating a coordinated, purpose‑built hub where women, youth, elders, and gender‑diverse people in rural Nova Scotia can access safety, advocacy, healthcare, and community without having to navigate a maze of systems alone.Learn More & Support One Door:To learn more about the One Door campaign, the new purpose-built centre, and how you can support this $5 million capital project, visit:https://onedoor.awrcsasa.caChapters:0:00 Gender-Based Violence Is Not a Blip 0:42 What Is Connect? 1:57 Rural Barriers & Food Deserts 3:22 Language: Rape vs Sexual Assault 4:20 Epidemic vs Endemic GBV 6:36 Advocacy Trade-Offs & Funding 7:22 Social Media Censorship & Euphemisms 9:22 Different Communities, Different Needs 11:17 How Client Needs Have Changed 12:51 Economics, Housing & Ability to Leave 13:40 “For the Love of My Sister” 16:41 Media, Justice & Invisible Victims 19:08 Changing Victim Services 20:15 Intergenerational Trauma Analogy 22:52 Breaking Cycles & Financial Control 24:02 The Economic Cost of GBV 24:55 Workplaces & Domestic Violence Leave 26:01 Gig Economy Risks for Women 28:20 Art as an Amplifier 30:29 “What Would You Pack to Flee?” 31:45 Housing & Cost of Living Crisis 33:00 Systems, Silos & Intersectionality 34:55 Women’s Health Strategy Barriers 36:27 Recent Wins for Women’s Centres 38:18 Waitlists & Basic Needs 39:26 “One Door Any Reason” Philosophy 42:16 What to Expect at a Women’s Centre 44:07 Louise’s Tree & Community Legacy 45:24 Closing & Call to Support One Door
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません