Central City Foundation's Hope Dialogue

PODCAST · society

Central City Foundation's Hope Dialogue

Created in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, Hope Dialogue is a weekly exploration of the topics, issues and complex circumstances challenging low-income neighbourhoods like this one, others around the lower mainland and beyond. Our focus is on listening to the voices who live and work in these communities, with the belief that conversations like this are how we can begin to make better progress toward solving some of our biggest social programs.Hope Dialogue is made possible through the generous support of Central City Foundation. To learn more about Central City Foundation, visit centralcityfoundation.ca

  1. 27

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Irwin Oostindie

    Irwin Oostindie, Director of Voor Urban Labs, joins us to talk about the lessons learned from the 2010 Olympics and the impacts that large events like the FIFA World Cup have on the host cities and the different communities within them.

  2. 26

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Mary Clare Zak

    Mary Clare Zak, Executive Director of SoleFoods Street Farms, joins us to talk about they create low-barrier employment opportunites by turning vacant urban land into street farms, as well as reflect on her decades working to help shape social change in our city.

  3. 25

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Dr. Sarah Schulman

    Dr. Sarah Schulman, founder of InWithForward, joins us to discuss moving beyond traditional top-down policy-making and instead using ethnographic and participatory research methods to hear what people actually need.

  4. 24

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Rowena Veylan

    Rowena Veylan, Founder of The New School of Fundraising, joins us to discuss why fundraising is under such strain and why investing in the people doing the work is so important.

  5. 23

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Cory Douglas

    Cory Douglas, a multidisciplinary Squamish Nation artist, architectural designer and cultural consultant, joins us to talk about how we all can benefit from looking at community planning and design through an Indigenous lens.

  6. 22

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Amanda Burrows

    Amanda Burrows, Executive Director of First United, joins us to discuss how we can better support people in low-income neighbourhoods in improving their lives.

  7. 21

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Sharon Gregson

    Sharon Gregson, child care advocate and one of the leading voices for the Ten Dollar a Day Child Care Campaign, joins us to discuss why universal child care is needed in BC.

  8. 20

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Matthew Smedley

    Matthew Smedley, Chief Empowerment Officer of Mission Possible, joins us to talk about the importance of low-barrier employment opportunities in low-income neighbourhoods.

  9. 19

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Mariam Bouchoutrouch

    Mariam Bouchoutrouch, Executive Director of Pacific Immigrant Resources Society, joins us to talk about the importance of providing supports and settlement services to newcomers.

  10. 18

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Jennifer Jonhstone

    Jennifer Johnstone, President & CEO of Central City Foundation, joins us to talk connections, belonging and the importance of having a shared vision for the future of low-income neighbourhoods.

  11. 17

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Alice Kendall

    Alice Kendall, Executive Director of Downtown Eastside Women's Centre, joins us to talk about the challenges with personal safety that women in low-income communities face every day.

  12. 16

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Ginger Gosnell-Myers

    Ginger Gosnell-Myers, the first Indigenous Relations Manager at the City of Vancouver, joins us to talk about urban planning as seen through an Indigenous lens.

  13. 15

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Djaka Blais

    Djaka Blais, Executive Director of Hogan’s Alley Society, helps us learn more about the history of Hogan's Alley and people of African descent in Vancouver.

  14. 14

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Clara Prager

    Clara Prager, Manager of Civic Engagement and Advocacy at Women Transforming Cities joins us to talk about building our civic skills to better impact local governments.

  15. 13

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Steve Johnston

    Steve Johnston, Executive Director of Community Impact Real Estate Society joins us to talk about the importance of social purpose real estate in building communities.

  16. 12

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Angela Marie MacDougall

    Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director of Battered Women’s Support Services. joins us to talk about the systemic failures that enable gender-based violence to persist in our society.

  17. 11

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Landon Hoyt

    Landon Hoyt, Executive Director at the Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association, joins us to talk about how this BIA is doing things differently to make a difference in their low-income urban neighbourhood.

  18. 10

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Maura Gowans

    Maura Gowans, a registered social worker, joins us to talk about trauma-informed care and how to better help those who have experienced violence, pain and injustices.

  19. 9

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Ash MacLeod

    Ash MacLeod, Executive Director of A Better Life Foundation, joins us to talk about community-driven food programs and using food recovery to help make sure more people can be fed.

  20. 8

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Norm Leech

    Norm Leech, Executive Director at Frog's Hollow Neighbourhood House, joins Hope Dialogue to help us better understand the idea of decolonization and the associated opportunities for all of us.

  21. 7

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Sarah Stewart

    Sarah Stewart, Executive Director of Aunt Leah's joins Hope Dialogue to talk about how we can better support youth aging out of foster care in British Columbia.

  22. 6

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Sean Miles

    Sean joins Hope Dialogue to help us understand the importance of low-barrier income earning opportunities in neighbourhoods like the DTES.

  23. 5

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Tara Taylor

    Tara joins us to help explain the role and value of peer-based supportive employment in neighbourhoods like Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

  24. 4

    Hope Dialogue welcomes Jennifer Johnstone

    Jennifer joins us to talk about why it’s so important that we seek out and listen to voices from low-income communities who don’t currently have a platform to share their perspectives, views and ideas. And why Central City Foundation took action with a generous grant that has made this show possible.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Created in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, Hope Dialogue is a weekly exploration of the topics, issues and complex circumstances challenging low-income neighbourhoods like this one, others around the lower mainland and beyond. Our focus is on listening to the voices who live and work in these communities, with the belief that conversations like this are how we can begin to make better progress toward solving some of our biggest social programs.Hope Dialogue is made possible through the generous support of Central City Foundation. To learn more about Central City Foundation, visit centralcityfoundation.ca

HOSTED BY

Hope Dialogue

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!