Skip to main content

Author

This podcast is aimed to help credit union leaders and marketers think outside of the box about marketing, technology and community impact. Each episode we bring on guests from inside and outside of the industry who will challenge your preconceptions about business as usual.

CUNY TV, the noncommercial cable television station of the City University of New York, is the largest public university television station in the U.S. Our mission is to extend the educational activities within the University beyond its 25 colleges to all New Yorkers, and to reflect the diverse needs and opinions of its faculty and students. Established in 1985, the station is carried in the five boroughs of New York, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

Hope Wilder is a consultant and trainer working with schools and sociocracy. She is the author of “Let’s Decide Together!”, a guidebook for practicing sociocracy with children. She is currently the Sociocracy for All Schools and Sociocracy Program Manager.

Rohan Rice is a writer, photographer and translator based in London

Carol Fraser

Simone Senogles is a member of the leadership team at the Indigenous Environmental Network working on indigenous feminism, food sovereignty and climate justice.

Jessica Milgroom is an Associate Professor at the Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience (UK) doing research on wild rice and food sovereignty in Minnesota.

Emma Karnes is a Senior Project Manager at the New York City Economic Development Corporation.

Tina Jenkins Bell is a freelance journalist who has written for numerous local and national organization publications about economic and community development in addition to the Chicago Tribune, Crain's Chicago Business, Alaska Magazine, Upscale Magazine, Tech Republic, National Safety Council, and others.

Cira Pascual Marquina is a Political Science professor at the Universidad Bolivariana de Venezuela in Caracas. She is also co‐producer and co‐host (with Chris Gilbert) of the Marxist education program Escuela de Cuadros. She is actively engaged with grassroots organizations in Venezuela and abroad, and is dedicated, both as a militant and as an investigator, to communal initiatives. 

Pascual Marquina is co-author of Venezuela, the Present as Struggle: Voices from the Bolivarian Revolution (Monthly Review Press) and co‐compiler of two books: Para qué sirve El Capital: un balance contemporáneo de la obra principal de Karl Marx and ¿Por qué socialismo? Reactivando un debate (both Editorial Trinchera).