Fall 2025 Podcast

  • Whitney Taylor discusses constitutions, social rights, and prosecutorial backlash
    9/12/25
    In Episode 49 of The Baldy Center Podcast we welcome Whitney K. Taylor, PhD, Mid-Career Fellow at The Baldy Center. Taylor discusses her award-winning book, The Social Constitution: Embedding Social Rights Through Legal Mobilization. Her work examines how Colombia’s 1991 Constitution and the tutela procedure transformed access to justice, embedding social rights into everyday life. Taylor offers perspective on constitutional reform, the labor of law, and the political backlash that follows experiments in justice. Taylor connects her research in Colombia to ongoing debates in the United States, including the rise of reform-minded prosecutors and the challenges they face.
  • Helen Drew and Ken Belson discuss stadium financing, public subsidies, and the politics of pro sports
    10/15/25
    In Episode 50 of The Baldy Center Podcast, Helen “Nellie” Drew  joins Ken Belson to discuss the complex intersections of professional sports, public subsidies, and policy decisions. Drawing from the Buffalo Bills stadium deal and other national examples, they explore how public-private partnerships shape urban economies, political choices, and community identity. Their conversation examines both the economic and ethical dimensions of sports development and what it reveals about how cities invest in their teams and themselves. Nellie Drew, Professor of Practice in Sports Law, is the director of the UB Center for the Advancement of Sport. Ken Belson, long-time New York Times sports business reporter, is the author of the book Every Day Is Sunday: How Jerry Jones, Robert Kraft, and Roger Goodell Turned the NFL into a Cultural & Economic Juggernaut. 
  • Michael Gibson-Light discusses prison labor, prisoners’ unions, and the politics of work behind bars
    12/5/25
    In Episode 51 of The Baldy Center Podcast Michael Gibson-Light discusses his research on the 1970s prison labor movement in the United States. He details how incarcerated workers organized through underground newspapers like The Outlaw, the rise and fall of prisoners’ unions, and what this history reveals for today’s debates on prison labor and mass incarceration.