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Full episode
484: Doppelgängers
Act Two

In Country, In City

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For decades, the writer Alex Kotlowitz has been writing about the inner cities and the toll of violence on young people. So when he heard about a program at Drexel University where guys from the inner city get counseling for PTSD, he wondered if the effect of urban violence was comparable to the trauma that a person experiences from war. Kotlowitz talks to a military vet from Afghanistan and a guy from Philadelphia who’s lived in some pretty bad neighborhoods to find out if they are doubles of some sort. (23 minutes)

Alex is the author of the book There Are No Children Here and producer of the documentary film The Interrupters. Special thanks to the program Healing Hurt People at Drexel University for assistance with this story.

By

Alex Kotlowitz

Song:

“Me and My Shadow” by Sammy Davis, Jr.

More in Afghanistan

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592: Are We There Yet?
July 29, 2016

Act One: Field of Interrupted Dreams

One good place to see how this ad hoc response is working is at an abandoned baseball stadium in Athens.
572: Transformers
Nov. 6, 2015

Act Two: Streetwise

Most big grand transformations we go through really come down to a hundred little things that we change about ourselves.
445: Ten Years In
Sept. 9, 2011

Act One: Kabul Kabul Kabul Kabul Chameleon

Hyder Akbar was a teenager living with his family in the Bay Area when president Hamid Karzai asked Hyder's dad to return to Afghanistan and become an official in the new government.

More by Alex Kotlowitz

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488: Harper High School - Part Two
Feb. 22, 2013

Act One: The Eyewitness

Most murders in Chicago happen in public places — parks, alleyways, cars.
488: Harper High School - Part Two
Feb. 22, 2013

Act Four: Devonte, Part Two

In the first hour of our Harper High School shows, Alex Kotlowitz talked to a junior named Devonte who a year earlier had accidentally shot and killed his 14-year-old brother.
487: Harper High School - Part One
Feb. 15, 2013

Act Two: A Tiny Office on the Second Floor

Reporter Alex Kotlowitz spends time in the social work office, where the effects of gun violence are most often apparent.
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