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Saturday, April 19, 2025

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Tagged with: communities

34th annual Bioneers conference will tap young and old for big answers

Structural "othering" and the intelligence of animals take the fore at Berkeley thinker's ball.

UCLA’s secretive neoliberal housing conference

It's worse than Davos: A one-sided policy event with no dissenters—and no reporters unless they sign gag orders.

The price of ending homelessness—and how to prevent SRO evictions

A city plan that's marked for failure, and some hope of success saving vulnerable residents' homes. That's The Agenda for March 19-26

This land is whose land?

The developer and the city insist the Hunters Point Shipyard is safe for development. There's a lot of data that says otherwise. Part III of a series.

Opinion: A proactive vision for a flooded San Francisco

How could we change the cycle of damage? In a way, by turning back the clock.

Glitter-strewn resistance: Amalia Mesa-Bains talks beauty

Groundbreaking Chicana artist traces path of her Berkeley retrospective.

The Hunters Point Shipyard: Art survives amid toxic waste

Part II: As artists move into the former base, the level of contamination reaches the point where 'if it can't be cleaned, stay the hell out.'

The tragic toxic legacy of the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard

Aided by a USC fellowship, reporter Tom Molanphy and 48hills dug into the overwhelming history of data concerning the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, which...

Radio play ‘The Forever Wave’ imagines a climate-drowned SF of 2070

Writer Nicole Gluckstern and a diverse cast take to the airwaves to ask, What will emerge when our systems collapse?

Civil Rights leader Ben Jealous on new book: ‘The insanity of racism diminishes all’

In 'Never Forget Our People Were Always Free: A Parable of American Healing,' the former NAACP head gets personal