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  <title>Rethinking Borders: Race and the Politics of Belonging</title>
  <description>In this episode, Awa sits down with scholar Luke de Noronha to question what borders really do in our everyday lives. From citizenship and belonging to the politics behind “migration crises,” they explore how borders shape who belongs, who is welcomed, and who is framed as a threat.

JINGLE

“Niamey Nights”, Bamako Bae, Shutterstock, ⁠⁠https://www.shutterstock.com/music/track-1221135-niamey-nights⁠ (https://www.shutterstock.com/music/track-1221135-niamey-nights)

REFERENCES

Bradley, Gracie Mae, and Luke De Noronha. Against borders: The case for abolition. Verso Books, 2022.

Robinson, Cedric J. Forgeries of memory and meaning: Blacks and the regimes of race in American theater and film before World War II. UNC Press Books, 2012.

CONTRIBUTORS

Host: Awa Sow

Guest: Luke de Noronha
Edited by: Awa Sow</description>
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