In this episode we speak to DJC staff attorney Whitley Granberry and Jerry Hebron who runs Oakland Avenue Urban Farm in Detroit’s North End. Our guests deliver a powerful summary of what cooperative economics are, and how they serve to shore up equity for future generations. We’ll also talk to Jerry about ancestral recipes and how her farm's delicious Afro-Jam came about.
TRANSCRIPT
To learn more about and support our work, visit detroitjustice.org/donate.
RELEVANT LINKS
Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice by Jessica Gordon Nembhard
Non-profit urban farm in Detroit still helping amid COVID-19 outbreak
Freedom Dreams, An Epilogue
A Mass Movement to End Solitary Confinement
An Intergenerational Vision for Beloved Community
Dreaming of Child-Safe Zones
Building Power Inside the Informal Economy
The Community is the Family and the Family is the Community
The Cost of Truth and Reconciliation
Finding a Common Justice
Detroit Life is Valuable Everyday
We Make Peace
Season 2 of Freedom Dreams!
Fear of Black Consciousness
How Do We Grow Our Own Food on Our Own Land?
How Do We Create Health Care that Meets our Needs?
How Can We Heal and Reimagine Safe Communities?
How Do We Make School Ourselves?
How Do We Ensure our City Budgets Reflect Our Priorities?
How Can You Shut Down Your City Jail?
Why Freedom Dreams?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL