Episódios
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In this episode, Dr Chidinma Okolo discusses the challenges women face in African societies, especially in their working environments
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In this episode, Malawian journalist and political analyst Levi Kabwato discusses the need to decolonise International Justice
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In this episode, Dr Chika Esiobu discusses the steady collapse of Africa's ill-fitting European foundations and its implications for the continent's liberation
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In this episode, Dr Gateka Ndayisaba discusses the taboos preventing a healthy debate about abortion in Africa
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In this episode, Zimbabwean political analyst Kelvin Jakachira discusses the implications of SADC's intervention in the DRC
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In this episode, Dr Yusuf Serunkuma discusses the lessons to learn from the ongoing settler colonialism violence in Palestine
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In this episode, Dr Mohamed Kheir Omer discusses the unfinished business of state formation in the Horn of Africa and the dangers of state disintegration as a result of incessant conflicts.
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In this episode, our guest Dr. Bojana Coulibaly explains how the UN peacekeeping mission in DRC, MONUSCO, has been working with the very negative forces it was supposed to disarm.
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In this podcast, Panafrican Review's Mahatma Ulimwengu discusses with Dr. Chika Esiobu the problematic aspects of using pejorative and derogatory terms such as "Ghetto" to name African talents.
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In this episode, Panafrican Review's Mahatma and author Suzie Ndaundika Shefeni discuss the implications of Africa's non-alignment in the context of global geopolitical upheavals.
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In this Podcast, Dr. Frederick Golooba-Mutebi discusses the responsibility of the DRC government in resolving the unending crises in the Kivus once and for all.
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Panafrican Review's guest Dr Yusuf Serunkuma discusses the insidious ways in which colonialism fetishizes itself and endlessly mutates, oftentimes, appearing to align with the colonised and the “performatively friendlier” ways through which pillage of Africa is disguised and executed
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The ECOWAS is contemplating an armed intervention following the coup in Niger. Professor Chikodiri Nwangwu and Mahatma Ulimwengu discuss the dangers of such action.
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In this episode, we delve into the remarkable life and enduring impact of Julius Kambarage Nyerere, an iconic figure whose visionary leadership shaped the destiny of a continent. Nyerere, often referred to as "Mwalimu," meaning "teacher" in Swahili, was not only the founding father and first President of Tanzania but also a statesman, philosopher, and advocate for African unity.
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Penser les problèmes d’une société dans une langue qui est non seulement étrangère mais aussi non maîtrisée par la majorité des locuteurs du pays conduit inévitablement à proposer des solutions décalées des réalités vécues et ressenties par les gens du commun.
Penser des solutions endogènes qui feront sens pour l’ensemble de la communauté invite non seulement à renouer avec son histoire, mais aussi avec sa langue et les valeurs qu’elle a incorporée dans la longue durée. Se réconcilier avec l’une et l’autre permettra sans nul doute de puiser en elles des héritages féconds pour le temps présent.
Par Jean Luc Galabert, Psychologue et Anthropologue
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Since the 1970s many African nations have missed out on the most important economic policy of them all. Export-oriented industrial policy has been essential to the success of most high-income and rapidly emerging nations. Whether in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Israel, Japan, China, Costa Rica, Chile, India, Morocco, Mauritius or Vietnam, this policy tool has been indispensable, and the evidence on the critical importance of what you export to your development trajectory is clear.
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Export-led industrial policy comes across to many as highly technical and complicated, including many well-versed global leaders and development practitioners. Yet actually it is a simple concept: it is merely the coordination of policies across governments to ensure the facilitation of investment in sectors that have the greatest potential to develop an economy by growing the number of value-adding, job-creating, foreign exchange-earning businesses. Whether Chilean wine, Vietnamese electronics, British textiles in the 1600s, Israeli agriculture or UAE’s tourism, these all required the coordination of enablers like energy, land, roads, market development, technology, investor facilitation and regulations.
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