Introducing: The Direct Message Podcast
The Direct Message Blog was born out of a recognition that our personal experiences shape our outlooks on policy and politics. In our blog-posts – many of which emerged through ordinary conversations about our lives, academic work and professional experiences – the Millennial Public Policy Fellows attempt to level with our audience and invite dialogue across difference.
The two of us, Myacah听补苍诲 , came to 麻豆果冻传媒 with a desire to think critically about how public policy has actively shaped the marginalization of communities in the United States and abroad. This is due in no small part to our own backgrounds as children of single mothers, people of color, and people with scholarly interests in racial and ethnic studies – perspectives often excluded from intergenerational policy analysis.
In this four-part Direct Message Podcast series, we鈥檒l work to leverage our positions at 麻豆果冻传媒 to center some of the narratives and understandings of policy issues that have been historically marginalized both before and during our lifetimes. By chatting with friends and experts alike, we’ll revisit discussions about the impacts of things like welfare reform, No Child Left Behind, the PATRIOT Act, and the Great Recession to gain a better understanding of the future of American politics.
We鈥檒l ask questions like: How has living in a post-9/11 world affected our perceptions of security, safety, and surveillance? What did the Great Recession mean for our perceived financial security? How are our partisan affiliations (or lack thereof) affected by contemporary shifts in two-party politics? How have past and present social movements reshaped how young people conceptualize political progress? The DM Podcast will attempt to show the benefits and costs of analyzing these moments through a generational lens.
For our first episode, 鈥Raised by a Welfare Queen,鈥 we chose a topic that greatly shaped our childhoods – welfare reform. In the 1990s President Bill Clinton campaigned on a promise to 鈥溾 in response to mounting concerns about the decline of marriage rates and the myth of the welfare queen. What did this mean for the children who grew up under this policy prescription that became a flashpoint in the erosion of the American social safety net? To help us answer this question, we sat down with Associate Professor of History at Georgetown University, to discuss the fraught history of welfare policy and the gendered and racialized narratives that have shaped it.
鈥淩aised by a Welfare Queen鈥 epitomizes some of the struggles central in framing the work that think tanks do. The arc of public policy in the late 鈥90s easily elevated the two-parent household, but how can you identify the ways that this affected the children that grew up during this time period, regardless of how many people raised them? We spent some time talking with Dr. Chatelain about the ways in which the loaded idea of 鈥減ersonal responsibility鈥 still lingers in the financial decision-making that Millennials deal with now. In the discussion, we mention a few things worth reading:
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Millennial Fellow Roselyn Miller鈥檚 Direct Message blogpost on chosen family
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Family-Centered Social Policy Director Rachel Black鈥檚 article in The Atlantic titled
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An annotated version of The Negro Family: The Case for National Action, also known as the
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Becoming Visible: Race, Economic Security, and Political Voice in Jackson, Mississippi
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Political Reform鈥檚 Mark Schmitt鈥檚 on the 鈥淪cam Economy鈥
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We hope you enjoy our discussion and keep a look out for our next episode.
As always, thanks for letting us slide into your DMs.