Africa at LSE NewsletterScroll down for our latest posts In this first newsletter of 2015, we feature our recent series looking at the social development challenges facing a number of African countries. We also feature interesting perspectives on the Ebola outbreak in West Africa as well as Boko Haram and Burkina Faso.
The LSE Department of Media and Communications warmly invites you to a screening and discussion of The Awra Amba Experience on Wednesday February 4th 2015 at 5.30-8.00 in Tower 1, TW1.G.01. The Awra Amba Experience is an interactive documentary telling an inspiring and hopeful story about an Ethiopian village, that has dared to re-imagine and put into practise a new societal model. An online, cinematic experience allows audiences to explore the story through an immersive, 360° tour of the village, where they meet the community's inhabitants and learn about their way of life in short films, infographics and photo stories, as well as connect with the community through an online discussion platform.
Please RSVP to Dr Shakuntala Banaji (s.banaji@lse.ac.uk) or Dr Wendy Willems (w.willems@lse.ac.uk). LSE Africa Talks Public LectureDate: Tuesday 17 March 2015 Time: 6.30-8pm Venue: New Theatre, East Building Speaker: Dr Sean Jacobs, The New School Chair: Dr Wendy Willems, Department of Media and Communications, LSE Developments and changes to the online media sphere point to interesting possibilities for how Africans are engaging in the global public sphere. Whether via irreverent Youtube prank videos, blogs, Instagram, song remixes, or producing independent online media (such as the Nigerian-focused Sahara Reporters), among others, and addressing topics such as homosexuality, gender relations, economic relations, African subjects are taking their place more and more as audiences and agents, rather than as receivers of aid and information. Visit the Events page to see more of what is coming up this term. Conor Gearty in Conversation with Chaloka Beyani Dr Beyani will talk about international human rights, working with the UN and his duties as Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons. Chaloka Beyani is Associate Professor of International Law at LSE. Listen From Transformational Leadership to Mafia State? Observations from South Africa's Two Decades of Democracy Widely considered to be Africa's oldest liberation movement, the African National Congress (ANC) played a historic role in ending apartheid in South Africa and has been the country's ruling political party since 1994. More recently, however, the ANC's legacy has been tarnished by allegations of corruption and inefficiency. Dr Mzukisi Qobo will discuss his view that political governance in South Africa has collapsed, and explore the possibilities of the country's political future. Listen
Follow us on twitter @AfricaAtLSE. |