Episodes
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This episode was on the one year anniversary of the #EndsarsProtest held in Lagos and other cities in Nigeria.
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The city of Lagos - Liveable, Inclusive and Sustainable with Political candidate: Funso Doherty
(Lagos State Governor, African Democratic Congress (ADC)
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Missing episodes?
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Healthcare delivery in lagos by Dr. Basirat Oyalowo - Researcher
ACRC - African Cities Research Consortium
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Climate change in the city of Lagos with Toyin Oshaniwa,
Founder/Executive Director
Nature cares resource centre
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Making Lagos Work for Women with Olamide Udoma-Ejorh and
Miriam Adenuga from Lagos Urban Development Initiative (LUDI)
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Ease of Doing Business In Lagos with Arinola Oloko (Educationist)
Gbenga Komolafe, General Secretary
Federation of Informal Workers' Organizations of Nigeria, FIWON
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Education with Political candidate: Dr. Benneth Eze (Educationist) Deputy Governorship African Action Congress (AAC)
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The city of Lagos with Political candidate: Gbadebo Vivour Rodes
(Governor, Labour Party).
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Flood and Wetland Management
with Consultant - Ebere Akwuebu (Environmental Law Research Institute) (ELRI)
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Transportation - How can it be sustainable with Yinka Jones (Lagos Urban Development Initiative (LUDI)
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Making lagos sustainable, liveable and inclusive with Deji Akinpelu
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All around the world, what constitutes a livable city is constantly in flux, usually following new cultural, social, or technological trends and discoveries. Our engagement with people on new ways of thinking about Lagos made one thing clear: government, civil society, and the public had been in thrall to decades-old myths and stereotypes. Generally, it has been convenient to lay the blame for urban dysfunction on certain, usually disadvantaged groups of people within society, leading to a mismatch between the solutions proffered and the real problems. The result is that those solutions have consistently failed.
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking.
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All around the world, what constitutes a livable city is constantly in flux, usually following new cultural, social, or technological trends and discoveries. Our engagement with people on new ways of thinking about Lagos made one thing clear: government, civil society, and the public had been in thrall to decades-old myths and stereotypes. Generally, it has been convenient to lay the blame for urban dysfunction on certain, usually disadvantaged groups of people within society, leading to a mismatch between the solutions proffered and the real problems. The result is that those solutions have consistently failed.
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking.
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All around the world, what constitutes a livable city is constantly in flux, usually following new cultural, social, or technological trends and discoveries. Our engagement with people on new ways of thinking about Lagos made one thing clear: government, civil society, and the public had been in thrall to decades-old myths and stereotypes. Generally, it has been convenient to lay the blame for urban dysfunction on certain, usually disadvantaged groups of people within society, leading to a mismatch between the solutions proffered and the real problems. The result is that those solutions have consistently failed.
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking.
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Street trading and hawking are not peculiar to urban Lagos. These activities often arise from socioeconomic realities essential to the proper functioning of society. Developing nations with large informal economies tend to have pronounced levels of street trading, which is a major source of jobs for the growing urban poor. Street trading and hawking that threatens mobility are often the consequences of policy failures.
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking.
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The general opinion that land ownership is the best investment is not only a myth, but a dangerous concoction that has led to land grabbing and speculation, fraud, family-land feud, perpetual tenant-landlord tension, and suboptimal use of land resources. On aggregate, it has perverse incentives.
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking.
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At a special session of the National Economic Council in March 2018, Bill Gates dropped a bombshell. The Nigerian Federal Government Economic Recovery and Growth plan was flawed, he claimed, because it paid much less attention to human capacity development than it did to infrastructure. Gates' logic was simple: “to anchor the economy over the long term, investment in infrastructure and competitiveness must go hand-in-hand with investments in the people.”
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking
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In 2007, the Lagos State government promulgated a law banning the activities of cart pushers, the ubiquitous informal workers who go from door to door collecting and evacuating cartloads of waste from many neighborhoods (poor and rich ones alike) around the city. The prohibitive law completely overlooks the fact that cart pushers have stepped in to fill an essential gap in the formal waste collection system:
Read more here: researchinlagos.org/lup_debunking
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