Anti-Muslim hate, like hate directed at many communities, thrives online. What can we do about it? In this episode, we talk to Shahed Amanullah, one of the organizers of No2H8, a hackathon to end online hate, and Tonya Mosley, a journalism fellow at Stanford and a member of the winning team.
Music credit: Kevin MacLeod, "Isolated."
Photo credit: Flickr user Bob Walker (rjw1)
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Anti-Muslim hate, like hate directed at many communities, thrives online. What can we do about it? In this episode, we talk to Shahed Amanullah, one of the organizers of No2H8, a hackathon to end online hate, and Tonya Mosley, a journalism fellow at Stanford and a member of the winning team.
Music credit: Kevin MacLeod, "Isolated."
Photo credit: Flickr user Bob Walker (rjw1)
A whole bunch of sophomores at Stanford just spent a full quarter studying the ethics of jihad. Why? What did their professor hope they'd learn? And what did they take away? A conversation with Professor Alexander Key, who taught the class, with reflections from Alina Utrata, a student in the class.
Photo credit: Alexander Key.
Music credit: Kevin MacLeod, Unanswered Questions
Kaleidoscope Islam
Anti-Muslim hate, like hate directed at many communities, thrives online. What can we do about it? In this episode, we talk to Shahed Amanullah, one of the organizers of No2H8, a hackathon to end online hate, and Tonya Mosley, a journalism fellow at Stanford and a member of the winning team.
Music credit: Kevin MacLeod, "Isolated."
Photo credit: Flickr user Bob Walker (rjw1)