';
side-area-logo

NON-FICTION | 4 EPISODES | SEASON 3 | 2024

The 93, far from clichés!

For a long time, Seine-Saint-Denis was presented as a department apart. Sometimes even as a territory on the bangs of the Republic. These stigmas have a history: that of spatial segregation, the consequences of economic crises and political choices.

Taking a closer look at the history of Seine-Saint-Denis helps us to understand the central place that this département and its inhabitants occupy in our collective trajectory. So, from its industrial past to municipal communism, from the school map to the concentration of immigrant populations in its social housing estates, from the economic crisis of the 1970s to the creation of autonomous struggles by the inhabitants of working-class neighborhoods, this new season of Thinking the 9-3 puts Seine-Saint-Denis back at the center of the country.

VOICES OF RESIDENTS
RESEARCHERS’ VOICES

Episode 1: How did Seine-Saint-Denis become 93?
With Emmanuel Bellanger, historian and director of the Centre d’histoire sociale du XXe siècle.

Episode 2: How to avoid ghettoizing memories of immigration?
With Jérémy Robine, Director of the Institut Français de Géopolitique, and Yasmina Bedar, President of the Yalla association, for the transmission of memories of immigration.

Episode 3: Has the State abandoned education in working-class neighborhoods?
With Youssef Souidi, economist and Wiam Berhouma, English teacher, anti-racist activist and delegate for the development of culture and popular education in the town of Noisy-le-sec.

Episode 4: What struggles for the inhabitants of working-class neighbourhoods?
Adeline de Lépinay, social science researcher and popular education activist, and Alhassana Diallo, co-founder of the Livry-Gargan Recyclerie and director of a social center.

A series of podcasts produced by Making Waves and Profession Banlieue
Created by Antoine Tricot with Barbara Jean-Marie
Mixing and original music by Martin Delafosse

GET

in touch

DISCOVER

all the projects