U.S. Corporate Crime Kills Thousands In Bhopal, India; A Queer Indian Scholar Speaks Out -
In the world’s worst industrial disaster, extreme corporate negligence led to a devastating gas explosion in 1984 at a pesticides factory in Bhopal, India then owned by Union Carbide, now Dow Chemical Company. Since the night of that disaster, over -
Survivors of this corporate crime and organizers of the large - scale India
Jiya Pandya, a queer scholar from India -
In this segment, we interview Jiya Pandya, a queer scholar from India working on disability studies and South Asian history, completing a PhD in History and Gender & Sexuality Studies at Princeton University. Jiya is currently organizing with the Inte -
In a classic example of cooptation by neoliberal capitalism, Jim Fetterling, the current CEO of Dow Chemical, is an out gay businessperson who has won numerous awards for diversity and inclusion. During Pride month a few years ago, Fetterling said that &q -
Survivors of Bhopal Chemical Disaster and Currently Harmed by Toxic Land -
Noel Bordador: a gay Filipino priest working for social justice -
Pauline Park speaks with Noel Bordador, an openly gay Filipino Episcopalian priest who runs a shelter for HIV+ LGBTQ people in the Philippines and who supports the movement for Palestinian liberation. -
Synopsis: Queer Indian Scholar Speaks Out Against US Corporate Crime In Bhopal; and Interview with Gay Filipino Priest Working for Social Justice
Guests:
iya Pandya, a queer scholar from India working on disability studies and South Asian history, completing a PhD in History and Gender & Sexuality Studies at Princeton University. -
Noel Bordador: a gay Filipino priest working for social justice Pauline Park speaks with Noel Bordador, an openly gay Filipino Episcopalian priest who runs a shelter for HIV+ LGBTQ people in the Philippines and who supports the movement for Palestinian li -