How Do We Dance With Legacy?
Mar 12, 2026 - 00:56:59
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & PodcastsAmerica’s high-poverty cities and counties have suffered for decades, enduring skyrocketing inequality, the opioid epidemic, rising housing costs, and widespread disinvestment. Governments have offered a variety of faile...
2023 Zócalo Book Prize: How Does a Community Save Itself? With Michelle Wilde Anderson is an episode from Zócalo Public Square by Zócalo Public Square. America’s high-poverty cities and counties have suffered for decades, enduring skyrocke...
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Published Apr 28, 2025, 01:04:15 long, audio available.
America’s high-poverty cities and counties have suffered for decades, enduring skyrocketing inequality, the opioid epidemic, rising housing costs, and widespread disinvestment. Governments have offered a variety of failed solutions, from luring wealthy outsiders to slashing public services. But four communities are turning inward instead: Stockton, California; rural Josephine County, Oregon; Lawrence, Massachusetts; and Detroit, Michigan. In these diverse places—all of which went broke in the wake of the Great Recession—locals are building networks and trust in one another and their institutions, to promote health, wealth, and opportunity. In Stockton, this meant designing organizations to help residents cope with trauma. In Josephine County, people convinced freedom-loving, government-averse voters to increase taxes. Lawrence is building a new model to secure living wages. Detroit is battling to stabilize low-income housing. What did these strategies look and feel like on the ground? How can other struggling places borrow from their playbooks? And what can the rest of the country do to support towns as they try to help themselves? Stanford Law School’s Michelle Wilde Anderson, winner of the 2023 Zócalo Book Prize for The Fight to Save the Town: Reimagining Discarded America, visits Zócalo to talk with Alberto Retana, president and CEO of South L.A.’s Community Coalition, about how a place with the odds against it can draw on historic strengths and resilient residents to thrive. Zócalo Public Square is proud to award the 2023 Zócalo Poetry Prize to Paige Buffington for her poem "From 20 Miles Outside of Gallup, Holbrook, Winslow, Farmington, or Albuquerque." The 2023 Zócalo Book and Poetry Prizes are generously sponsored by Tim Disney. Visit to read our articles and learn about upcoming events. Follow along on X: twitter.com/thepublicsquare Instagram: Facebook: LinkedIn:
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2023 Zócalo Book Prize: How Does a Community Save Itself? With Michelle Wilde Anderson is an episode from Zócalo Public Square by Zócalo Public Square.
This episode is 01:04:15 long.
This episode was published on Apr 28, 2025.
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2023 Zócalo Book Prize: How Does a Community Save Itself? With Michelle Wilde Anderson is from Zócalo Public Square by Zócalo Public Square.
Published Apr 28, 2025 and 01:04:15 long