Episodes
Competing Roles of the State, NGOs and the Local Community Towards Environmental Conservation in Kenya.
Published 03/29/07
BIO: Dr. Olubayi Olubayi is an associate professor of microbiology and the chair of the biotechnology program at Middlesex County College in Edison, New Jersey. He is also a lecturer in Africana Studies at Rutgers University where he teaches the senior seminar on wealth, and a class on the contributions of Africans to science. Dr. Olubayi earned his Ph.D. in plant biology from Rutgers University in 1995. His research focus was on the biology of bacteria-plant-cell interactions. He is the...
Published 03/15/07
Kenya and the Indian Ocean Diaspora: Which Direction and Which Sources?
Published 02/22/07
BIO: Dr Mark Horton is Reader in Archaeology, and until 2006, was Chair of the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Bristol. He has been working on the Kenyan coast since 1980, directing archaeological excavations in the Lamu archipelago, where his research has uncovered the earliest Islamic societies to be found in sub-Saharan Africa. He works with the British Institute in East Africa, and currently with University of Virginia NSF funded project on...
Published 02/15/07
BIO: Dr. Kusimba has served as Curator of African Archaeology and Ethnology at the Field Museum since 1994. He is also Adjunct faculty in the Departments of Anthropology at Northwestern University. Chap is involved in a number of disciplinary and interdisciplinary field and collection-based research as well as interdisciplinary and interdepartmental research projects. He has initiated international collaborative programs with colleagues at the National Museums of Kenya, Kenya Wildlife...
Published 02/08/07
BIO: Bruce Hardy, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Kenyon College. Bruce Hardy holds a B.A. in Anthropology and French from Emory University and M.A. and Ph.D. in Anthropology from Indiana University. He is part of the Environmental Studies faculty at Kenyon and teaches course on human ecology and human variation. Trained in paleoanthropology, he has worked extensively on the Paleolithic of Europe and Africa, particularly with early hominids and Neandertals. Recently, his...
Published 01/11/07
BIO: Dr. Macharia Waruingi , founder of the Kenya Development Network, neurophysiologist, and MIT doctoral candidate in Systems Thinking and Organizational Learning.
Published 11/30/06
Public Health and Capacity Building in Kenya
Published 11/16/06
ABSTRACT: Detention camps were put in remote, arid, ecologically unfriendly places. At great risk, women smuggled food from the villages to resistance fighters in the forests. During Mau Mau women’s roles changed and took on greater importance. Women lead prayers and had visions advising men where and when to attack. Women served as spies, collecting intelligence, arms and medicine, especially in Nairobi. The Mau Mau had little access to weapons. They had to be stolen from the British. The...
Published 11/09/06
BIO: Caroline Elkins work on the Mau Mau emergency examines the origins and escalation of British colonial violence, the nature of the camp experience, and the impact of detention upon the Kikuyu population and the Kenyan nation as a whole. In arguing against the accepted view that detention in Kenya was a moment for British liberal reform, Elkins reexamines Britain's civilizing mission and suggests that the postwar period in Kenya was one of violence and brutality rather than one of gradual...
Published 11/02/06
BIO: Caroline Elkins work on the Mau Mau emergency examines the origins and escalation of British colonial violence, the nature of the camp experience, and the impact of detention upon the Kikuyu population and the Kenyan nation as a whole. In arguing against the accepted view that detention in Kenya was a moment for British liberal reform, Elkins reexamines Britain's civilizing mission and suggests that the postwar period in Kenya was one of violence and brutality rather than one of gradual...
Published 11/02/06
BIO: Professor John Lonsdale spent 1940-44 as an infant war refugee near Cleveland, Ohio. Matriculated from Trinity in 1958 after National Service in the King's African Rifles. PhD from Trinity 1964. First teaching job at University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 1964-66. Fellow of Trinity since 1964. Director of Studies in History for Trinity 1968-2000. Tutor at Trinity 1974-83. Retired as Professor of Modern African History at the University of Cambridge 2004. Won University...
Published 10/26/06
BIO: Professor John Lonsdale spent 1940-44 as an infant war refugee near Cleveland, Ohio. Matriculated from Trinity in 1958 after National Service in the King's African Rifles. PhD from Trinity 1964. First teaching job at University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 1964-66. Fellow of Trinity since 1964. Director of Studies in History for Trinity 1968-2000. Tutor at Trinity 1974-83. Retired as Professor of Modern African History at the University of Cambridge 2004. Won University...
Published 10/26/06
BIO: Theodora O. Ayot is currently Professor of History at North Park University in Chicago, Illinois. She taught previously at Kenyatta University, Nairobi, Kenya, State University of New York, College at Fredonia, New York, and as a Visiting Professor at the University of Jonkoping, College of Health Sciences, Jonkoping, Sweden. Major academic publications include A history of the Luo of Western Kenya 1590-1930, (1987), The Luo Settlement in South Nyanza (1987), and Women and...
Published 10/19/06
BIO: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (b. 1938, Limuru, Kenya) is one of Africa's leading contemporary writers. His novels have been translated into more than thirty languages and have garnered numerous prizes. Currently, Ngũgĩ is Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Director of the International Center for Writing & Translation at the University of California, Irvine.
Published 10/12/06
Panel Discussion by The Global Institute. Moderator: Wendy Bosley, Executive Director, Fishbird Productions; Panelists: Ruth Hunt Wood, Artist and Trustee, Ol Malo Trust; Liz Frye, doctor, representing Carolina for Kibera; Yvonne Johanesson-Jones, Strategic Marketing and Compliance Manager, Gray Ghost Capital (Microfinance Division).
Published 10/05/06
Panel Discussion by The Global Institute. Moderator: Wendy Bosley, Executive Director, Fishbird Productions; Panelists: Ruth Hunt Wood, Artist and Trustee, Ol Malo Trust; Liz Frye, doctor, representing Carolina for Kibera; Yvonne Johanesson-Jones, Strategic Marketing and Compliance Manager, Gray Ghost Capital (Microfinance Division).
Published 10/05/06
BIO: Jean Ngoya Kidula is Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of Georgia, where she teaches classes in music cultures of the world, African music, and African American music. Prior to her appointment at UGA, Dr. Kidula was on the Music faculty of Kenyatta University for more than 15 years. Dr. Kidula received her Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology at UCLA. She has published articles on Religious popular music in Africa and the USA, on the localization of European ...
Published 09/28/06
BIO: James Thuo Gathii is the Governor Pataki Chair of International Commercial Law at Albany Law School, where he has been on the faculty since 2001. Professor Gathii received his LL.B. from the University of Nairobi and his LL.M. and S.J.D. from Harvard Law School. He is an Advocate of the High Court of Kenya. He has consulted for the Constitution of Kenya Review Commission. His research and expertise is in the areas of public international law, international economic law, international...
Published 09/21/06
BIO: James Thuo Gathii is the Governor Pataki Chair of International Commercial Law at Albany Law School, where he has been on the faculty since 2001. Professor Gathii received his LL.B. from the University of Nairobi and his LL.M. and S.J.D. from Harvard Law School. He is an Advocate of the High Court of Kenya. He has consulted for the Constitution of Kenya Review Commission. His research and expertise is in the areas of public international law, international economic law, international...
Published 09/21/06
BIO: ALI A. MAZRUI was born in Mombasa, Kenya, on February 24, 1933. He is now Albert Schweitzer Professor in the Humanities and Director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at Binghamton University. He is also Albert Luthuli Professor-at-Large at the University of Jos in Nigeria. Dr. Mazrui has also been appointed Chancellor of the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Kenya. Mazrui was Ibn Khaldun Professor-at-Large, Graduate School of Islamic and Social...
Published 08/31/06
BIO: ALI A. MAZRUI was born in Mombasa, Kenya, on February 24, 1933. He is now Albert Schweitzer Professor in the Humanities and Director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at Binghamton University. He is also Albert Luthuli Professor-at-Large at the University of Jos in Nigeria. Dr. Mazrui has also been appointed Chancellor of the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Kenya. Mazrui was Ibn Khaldun Professor-at-Large, Graduate School of Islamic and Social...
Published 08/31/06