
Podcast
African Arguments Podcast
14
0
Hosts Peter Dörrie and Desné Masie discuss Africa's vibrant political, cultural, economic and social affairs with changing guests.
Hosts Peter Dörrie and Desné Masie discuss Africa's vibrant political, cultural, economic and social affairs with changing guests.
Were the Local Elections in South Africa the Beginning of the End of the ANC?
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Not least due to the underwhelming performance and controversial behavior of President Jacob Zuma, the ANC has experienced a historic defeat in last week's local elections. Together with Nick Branson and Nompumelelo Runji, we discuss the details of the outcome, analyse winners, losers and surprises and ask how the venerable could come back from this setback, if indeed it can.
45:50
Africa and the Panama Papers with Nicholas Shaxson
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
The Panama Papers have laid bare the extend of illicit financial flows and the impact of tax havens on the world. But how are these revelations connected to the African continent? Host Desné Masie discusses with journalist Nicholas Shaxson, author of "Treasure Islands".
38:30
No, President dos Santos will not step down in Angola just yet
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Only hours after President dos Santos declared his intention to step down in 2018, we sat down with Angolan journalist/activist Rafael Marques de Morais and journalist/scholar Justin Pearce to discuss Angola's current situation.
43:08
Boom and Bust
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Mansour Sy and Lorenzo Fioramonti join us to share quite different, but equally interesting visions on how to approach the issue of radically falling prices for commodities that has thrown many African economies into disarray.
Find the shownotes on www.africanarguments.org/podcast
48:17
AAP#9: Gloomy Outlook for South Africa
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
We are joined by Martin Plaut and Gushwell Brooks to discuss the deplorable state of South African politics.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Martin Plaut (guest): Twitter
Gushwell Brooks (guest): Twitter
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
William Kentridge "Notes Towards a Model Opera" exhibition at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg
Justice Malala - We have now begun our descent: How to Stop South Africa losing its way
"West Africa: Word, Symbol, Song" exhibition at the British Library in London
JT Rappé
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
33:13
AAP#8: Elections in Uganda
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Ugandan Journalist Rosebell Kagumire and Crisis Group analyst Magnus Taylor join us to discuss Uganda's upcoming elections.
PLAYER
Download: MP3
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Rosebell Kagumire (guest): Twitter
Magnus Taylor (guest): Twitter
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
IOL - Sparrow and Hart: ‘Racists should leave SA’
BBC 4 - The Boat Children
Reports by Raymond Mujuni on YouTube
International Crisis Group -Burkina Faso: Transition, Act II
Mail & Guardian Africa
Articles by Christine Mungai
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
39:49
That was Africa's 2015
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
We are joined by Richard Dowden, Director of the Royal African Society and and Yinka Adegoke, the editor of Quartz Africa, to discuss the big trends of Africa's 2015.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Yinka Adegoke (guest): Twitter
Richard Dowden (guest): Twitter
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations
Defining the Narrative - group exhibition at the Gallery Momo in Cape Town
Boris Lojkine's "Hope" at the IMDB
Moussa Touré's "La Prigoue" at the IMDB and Amazon
"Fortunes of Africa: A 5,000 Year History of Wealth, Greed and Endeavour" by Martin Meredith
"Im Schatten des Baobab: Tic Toc Tausendbein und andere Geschichten aus Burkina Faso" by Anne Wenkel
Main discussion
"Winner Take All: China's Race For Resources and What It Means For Us" by Dambisa Moyo
The strange case of 77 blue-collar Chinese migrants that Kenya is calling “cyber-hackers”
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
38:53
AAP#6: Elections in West Africa with Cynthia Ohayon and Kamissa Camara
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
West Africa experts Cynthia Ohayon and Kamissa Camara join us to talk about the outcome of this year's elections in West Africa and their national and regional implications.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Cynthia Ohayon (guest): Twitter
Kamissa Camara (guest): Twitter
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations
We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Every 16-year-old in Sweden will get a copy of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s feminist manifesto
The original Ted-Talk
South African Institute of International Affairs
The International Crisis Group's West Africa publications
National Endowment for Democracy Africa page
Agenda
Black Georgians - The Shock of the Familiar
Sekouba Konaté pleads guilty to smuggling $64,000 into the US
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
41:47
AAP#5: China in Africa with Deborah Brautigam
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
We are joined by Deborah Brautigam, author of "Will Africa feed China" and "The Dragon's Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa" to talk about Chinese-African relations and misconceptions of China's role on the African continent.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Deborah Brautigam (guest): Twitter | Blog
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations
Desne's review of "The Book of Memory" by Petinah Gappah
The Book of Memory on Amazon
The Royal African Society's "Whats_on Africa"
Graeme Wood: What ISIS really wants
Kongo: Power and Majesty at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Chris Blattman's blog post on the exhebition
China in Africa
2005 BBC article on dynamite factory explosion in Zambia
Eckart Woertz: "Oil for Food: The Global Food Crisis and the Middle East"
Agenda
Africities 2015 Summit
7th Forum on China-Africa Cooperation
Deborah's talk at Wits University: "Feeding Frenzy – Fictions & Facts about China, Africa & the Media" on November 17
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
36:50
AAP#4: Economic Statistics in Africa with Morten Jerven
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
We talk with Morten Jerven, author of "Poor Numbers" and "Africa: Why Economists get it Wrong" about the quality of economic statistics in Africa and why it matters.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Morten Jerven (guest): Twitter | Homepage
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations:
Infographics on the MTN fine
Coverage of the MTN fine by IOL.co.za
New Frontiers in African Economic History Workshop
African Economic History Network
Free Textbook on the History of African Development
Beasts of no Nation on Netflix
Economic Statistics in Africa
"Rwanda accused of manipulating poverty statistics" by F24
Filip Reyntjens' article on the issue on African Arguments
"Africa's middle class is dramatically smaller than we think" by Quartz
Transcript of Thomas Picketty's Mandela Annual Lecture 2015
Ease of Doing Business Rankings
Agenda
African Studies Association Annual Meeting
United Nations Security Council Resolution on Burundi
Chatham House Event: The Pace of Change in Ethiopia: Present Day and Prospects Ahead
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
38:49
AAP#3: Nigeria and the Buhari Administration with James Schneider and Lagun Akinloye
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Five months after taking office, President Buhari has finally named his cabinet. Journalist James Schneider and analyst Lagun Akinloye join us to discuss why it took so long, explain the ramifications and debate if Buhari's anti-corruption drive means anything in the long term.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Lagun Akinloye (political analyst on Nigeria and the head of Public Relations for the Central Association of Nigerians in the UK): Twitter
James Schneider (senior correspondent at the New African Magazine): Twitter
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations:
The website of the Economic Freedom Fighters
China in Africa Podcast on iTunes
China in Africa Podcast episode with James Schneider
China-Africa Reporting Project
AKÉ Arts & Book Festival
The Drone Papers and Target Africa
Nigeria and the Buhari Administration
Buhari's first 21 appointments analyzed
Reuters: Without a cabinet, Nigeria is stuck 'on hold'
New York Times: Nigeria President Escalates Campaign to Stem Corruption
UNECA High Level Panel on Illicit Financial Flows
Buhari locates looted Nigerian funds stashed away in the US and European banks
Agenda
Film Africa 2015
Homepage of the India-Africa Forum Summit 2015
Quartz: Everything you need to know about India’s trade with Africa, in six charts
Quartz: Completely outspent by China, India is sticking to its own plan to win over Africa
Homepage of Larry Ekundayo
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
50:44
AAP#2: The Conversation and Journalism in Africa with Jabulani Sikhakhane
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
We talk with Jabulani Sikhakhane, deputy editor of The Conversation Africa about his publication's special approach to journalism and the state of the fourth estate across the continent.
Subscribe: RSS | iTunes | Soundcloud | Stitcher
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Jabulani Sikhakhane (guest, deputy editor of The Conversation Africa): Twitter | The Conversation Africa
African Arguments: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Recommendations:
Zambian Economist
Chola Mukanga on Twitter
Zambia is downgraded again!
Closing the research gap between Africa and the rest of the world
Future (im)perfect? Mapping conflict, violence and extremism in Africa
The Conversation Africa
10 ways the The Conversation is different
The Conversation France
The Conversation Republishing Guidelines
Contribute to The Conversation
Agenda
Red Media Summit
Livestream
Chude Jideonwo on Twitter
StateCraft
Binyavanga Wainaina on Twitter
James Schneider on Twitter
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
33:49
AAP#1: Electoral Politics in the DR Congo with Jason Stearns
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
Jason Stearns joins us to talk about electoral politics in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. We get into President Joseph Kabila's strategy for political (and physical) survival, China's role in Congolese politics and Moise Katumbi, Kabila's heir apparent.
Subscribe: RSS | Soundcloud | iTunes (coming soon!)
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Jason Stearns (guest, expert on politics and security in the DR Congo): Twitter | Blog
African Arguments/Royal African Society: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Dancing in the Glory of Monsters - Jason's fantastic book on the Congo conflicts
How will the oil price collapse affect the Africa Rising story? by Desné Masie on African Arguments
Africa's oil boom goes bust by Luke Patey on African Arguments
Mathematiques Congolaises by Jean Bofane
Congo Kitoko - Exhibition in Paris on Congolese modern art
Daniel Eizenga's Burkina Faso updates on the Sahel Blog
Congo’s Katanga Governor Moïse Katumbi leaves ruling party, breaks silence by Kris Berwouts on African Arguments
Thomas Piketty at the Annual Nelson Mandela Lecture
The Daily Show with Trevor Noah
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch! There are links to the social media profiles of our hosts above, or drop us a line at africanargumentspodcast@gmail.com.
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
40:38
AAP 000: Discussing African Arguments with James Wan
Episode in
African Arguments Podcast
This is a teaser episode for the upcoming African Arguments Podcast with special guest James Wan, editor-in-chief of African Arguments. We discuss African Argument's publishing strategy, James' experiences from his first weeks on the job and how the podcast fits into all of this.
Subscribe: RSS
Follow us and our guests:
Desné Masie (co-host): Twitter
Peter Dörrie (co-host/producer): Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
James Wan (editor, African Arguments): Twitter
African Arguments/Royal African Society: Twitter | Facebook | Homepage
Notes
Quartz: Lessons from Thomas Piketty for South Africa, one of the most unequal countries in the world
African Arguments: The Old Guard vs. The People, Round 2
African Arguments: After the coup in Burkina Faso: unity, justice, and dismantling the Compaoré system
Joe Penny's Twitter profile
African Arguments
Royal African Society
Making Sense of the Sudans
The Nigeria Forum
The Central Africa Forum
African Journalism Fund
Articles by Morten Jerven on African Arguments
Books on Desné's reading list :
Ricardo Soares de Oliveira - Magnificent and Beggar Land: Angola Since the Civil War
Morten Jerven - Africa: Why Economists Get it Wrong
Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo - Poor Economics: Barefoot Hedge-fund Managers, DIY Doctors and the Surprising Truth about Life on less than $1 a Day
Thanks for listening! We are grateful to African Arguments and the Royal African Society for supporting the podcast. If you would like to support us, have a suggestion for a topic we should cover or a guest we should invite, please get in touch!
The music on this podcast was kindly provided by DJ Maramza.
28:47
You may also like View more
La ContraCrónica
Un programa que empieza donde otros acaban. Política, economía, análisis y opinión con Fernando Díaz Villanueva. Updated
Carne Cruda - PROGRAMAS
Todos los programas completos de la República Independiente de la Radio. Escúchalos en carnecruda.es y haz posible este programa en https://carnecruda.es/hazte_productor/ Updated
Un tema al día
'Un tema Al día’ es un podcast de elDiario.es para explicarte la actualidad. Con ayuda de los mejores periodistas de la redacción, nos detendremos cada día en un asunto: puede ser una noticia compleja o una historia sencilla que merezca la pena. Una píldora de sonido para acompañarte en el desayuno, de camino al trabajo, en la pausa de la comida o antes de dormir. Con Juanlu Sánchez. Disponible en tu plataforma de audio favorita. Updated



