Podcasts about Makerere University

Ugandan public university

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Best podcasts about Makerere University

Latest podcast episodes about Makerere University

Drug Safety Matters
#37 Beyond numbers, quality in ADR reporting – Henry Zakumumpa

Drug Safety Matters

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 38:49 Transcription Available


Spontaneous adverse event reporting from healthcare professionals and patients is a cornerstone in pharmacovigilance systems. Unfortunately, it is a well-known issue that only a fraction of events is reported. To further complicate matters, poor quality reports present a significant challenge for pharmacovigilance assessors. In Uganda, several new routes have been introduced to facilitate reporting for patients and healthcare professionals, including email, WhatsApp and the Med Safety smartphone app. Henry Zakumumpa is a researcher at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda. He has recently performed a qualitative study to learn more about drivers and obstacles for quality in adverse event reporting from patients and healthcare professionals in Uganda. He joins the Drug Safety Matters studio to help us get a more nuanced picture of challenges and opportunities around the issue.  Tune in to find out:Why are HIV patients in Uganda reluctant to report adverse events to their healthcare providers?What are the challenges with reporting via WhatsApp?How can regulators and PV centres foster better quality in incoming adverse event reports? Want to know more?Listen to Henry talk about the safety of HIV medications in this 2022 episode of Drug Safety Matters.Visit this CARTA (Consortium for Advanced Research Training in Africa) profile page to learn more about Henry's research.Improving the spontaneous reporting of suspected adverse drug reactions: An overview of systematic reviews (British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 2023)Improving adverse drug event reporting by healthcare professionals (Cochrane Database Systematic Review, 2024) Join the conversation on social mediaFollow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, X, or Bluesky and share your thoughts about the show with the hashtag #DrugSafetyMatters.Got a story to share?We're always looking for new content and interesting people to interview. If you have a great idea for a show, get in touch!About UMCRead more about Uppsala Monitoring Centre and how we work to advance medicines safety.

Expositors Collective
What Does the Bible Say About Tithing, Women Pastors, and Speaking in Tongues?

Expositors Collective

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 44:10


Recorded live in Kampala, Uganda, this episode features a wide-ranging and deeply honest conversation on the practice of church leadership in a variety of contexts. Pastors from Calvary Chapel and Baptist traditions come together to address anonymous audience questions on everything from altar calls to tongues, from tithing to women in ministry, and from spiritual gifts to church planting proximity.With grace, humour, and biblical grounding, panelists explore:When (and why) to invite a public response after a sermonWhether Christians are cursed if they don't titheWhat spiritual gifts look like in different church culturesWhy some churches do not ordain women as pastorsHow to teach clearly about demons in spiritually sensitive culturesAnd the wisdom of planting churches near existing onesYou'll hear personal stories, pastoral insight, and moments of sharp theological clarity - all shaped by the lived experience of ministry in Uganda and beyond.Featuring:Eric Lockheart, lecturer and administrator at Uganda Baptist Seminary. He holds an MDiv in Christian Ministry and a ThM in Applied Theology, both from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary (Wake Forest, NC). Eric served as a pastor in the USA for 14 years before moving with his wife and four sons to Uganda in 2018 to serve under the IMB Baptist Mission. He loves teaching Hermeneutics and Homiletics, and enjoys sports, reading, fishing, and time with his family.James Senyonjjo Okurut, lecturer at Uganda Baptist Seminary since 2020, with over 20 years of ministry experience. He holds a BA from Makerere University (specialising in Communication), a BTh from UBS, and is pursuing a Master's from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary.Zeddie Muzungu, Senior Pastor of Calvary Chapel Kampala and Director of Calvary Chapel Bible College Uganda. He is passionate about teaching God's Word and training future church leaders. He is married to Hope Muzungu.Ed Compean, lead pastor of Shoreline Calvary in Morro Bay, California. He previously served in Nairobi, Kenya, as a church planter and coach to emerging leaders, and is actively involved with the Cultivate Church Planting Initiative of Calvary Global Network.Join Mike Neglia and Brian Kelly at the upcoming CGN Ministry Conference June 22-25, 2025 This conference is designed for church leaders and their ministry teams to connect, collaborate, and grow together. Dive deep into John 13–17, The Upper Room Discourse, with our main session speakers, and attend workshops led by experienced leaders in key areas such as Lead and Senior Pastors, Executive and Associate Pastors, Women in Ministry, Children's Ministry, Youth Ministry, Worship, Small Groups and Care Leaders, Tech Teams, Administration, and Lay Leaders. Whether you're a pastor, ministry worker, or volunteer, this event is for your whole team. Join us for an inspiring time of learning, fellowship, and renewed vision for the work God has called us to!For information about our upcoming training events visit ExpositorsCollective.com The Expositors Collective podcast is part of the CGNMedia, Working together to proclaim the Gospel, make disciples, and plant churches. For more content like this, visit https://cgnmedia.org/Join our private Facebook group to continue the conversation: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ExpositorsCollectiveDonate to support the work of Expositors Collective, in person training events and a free weekly podcast: https://cgn.churchcenter.com/giving/to/expositors-collective

New Vision Podcast
Taking up opportunities in Chinese language and culture [Beijing Chronicles]

New Vision Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 12:25


Ugandan youth are taking up opportunities in Chinese language proficiency and culture... Raziah Athman attended one of the classes at the Confucius Intitute in Makerere University.

Future Learning Design Podcast
Can We Make Spaces for Knowledge Systems to Coexist, Without Duress? - A Conversation Prof. Catherine Odora Hoppers

Future Learning Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2025 36:11


As you will have heard on many previous episodes of the podcast, with Marie Battiste, Carl Mika, Wakanyi Hoffman, Vanessa Andreotti and others, understanding the ways in which our colonial schooling systems have propogated one particular way of knowing our world, and excluded and often violently suppressed many others is something that I care deeply about. For me, it has to be a key part of any transformative work that we do to, with humility and curiosity, to reorient education systems. But in order to do this, we need people who are able to gather and convene the critical conversations that put these ways of knowing in dialogue with each other. It is therefore the greatest honour to have Professor Catherine Odora Hoppers joining me on the podcast this week. For her entire career Dr Hoppers has been at the forefront of facilitating these vital conversations. In post-Apartheid South Africa, she designed and enabled the process that led to the first national policy on the recognition, development and protection of indigenous knowledge systems. Professor Catherine Odora Hoppers is a scholar and policy specialist on International Development, education, North-South questions, disarmament, peace, and human security. She is a UNESCO expert in basic education, lifelong learning, information systems and on Science and Society; an expert in disarmament at the UN Department of Disarmament Affairs; an expert to the World Economic Forum on benefit sharing and value addition protocols; and the World Intellectual Property Organisation on traditional knowledge and community intellectual property rights.She got a Masters and PhD in International Education from Stockholm University, Sweden. In South Africa, Professor Hoppers was awarded Professor Extraordinarius in 2019 at University of South Africa (Pretoria). She held a South African Research Chair in Development Education at the University of South Africa (2008-2018). Prior to that, she was a technical adviser on Indigenous Knowledge Systems to the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Arts, Culture, Science and Technology (South Africa) and led the Task Team to draft the national policy on Indigenous Knowledge Systems. She is a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf, 2002), and was a member of the Academy of Science Special Panel on the Future of Humanities (South Africa).She was the Goodwill Ambassador for Makerere University in Kampala Uganda; and Ambassador for Non-Violence at the Durban Universities' International Centre for Non-Violence. In July 2015, she received the Nelson Mandela Distinguished Africanist Award from HE Thabo Mbeki for her pursuit of the total liberation for the African continent through the promotion of Indigenous Knowledge Systems of Education and in the same year, Prof Hoppers was awarded “Woman of the Year” by the University of South Africa, and was named as a “Leading Educationist” and was honoured in the Gallery of Leadership as the 63 most influential people who have shaped Unisa since its inception in 1873, in a permanent exhibition in Kgorong Building in UNISA. In 2017, Professor Hoppers received the distinction from UNESCO as an Honorary Fellow in Lifelong learning. She is the Founder and Director, Global Institute for Applied Governance in Science, Knowledge Systems and Innovations (https://www.giagsi-ug.org/the-faculty/). She held a Professorship in Education at Gulu University (Uganda) and is now the Canada Research Chair in Transdisciplinarity, Cognitive Justice and Education as part of the Pluralism Strategy Initiative at the University of Calgary (https://www.ucalgary.ca/pluralism/scholars-educators-researchers).She is the author of many important works including the book, Rethinking Thinking: Modernity's "other" and the Transformation of the University with the late Prof. Howard Richards.https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=qWEKG-QAAAAJ&hl=en

63 Degrees North
Old flames die hard

63 Degrees North

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 21:19


Jimmy Chaciga, a PhD research fellow at Makerere University in Uganda, thinks he has what it will take to get Ugandan households to adopt solar-powered cookers. First, cookers need to be simple to operate. They need to be cheap. They need to be able to cook once the sun has gone down.But most of all, they need to be able to cook beans."If you can cook beans, you can cook anything," he says.Armed with two drums, a lot of insulation, some solar panels and a dream, Chaciga is trying to bring his cooker to Ugandan households and institutions that need it the most.Chaciga is one of a group of African researchers working with NTNU's Ole Jørgen Nydal under projects funded by NORAD, the Norwegian Agency for International Development, and the University Network on PhD Programmes in Energy Technology (UNET), co-funded by the EU's Erasmus + programme.Here's the situation: After decades of research and funding to help households in developing countries shift away from firewood, charcoal and other biomass, 75% continue to rely on these resources for cooking. Clearly, cooking with wood is bad. It wastes women and children's time as they scavenge scarce wood to burn.It contributes to deforestation. It's a huge problem that seems like it should be solvable with enough smart engineering, yet it persists.Today's episode explores the successes and challenges researchers have faced in tackling this issue.My guests are Jimmy Chaciga, Ashmore Mawire and Ole Jørgen Nydal.You can see videos and documents from the International Energy Agency's Clean Cooking Summit from May 2024 here.Here are some publications describing some of the work in today's show:Chaciga, Jimmy; Nyeinga, Karidewa; Okello, Denis; Nydal, Ole Jørgen. (2024) Design and experimental analysis on a single tank energy storage system integrated with a cooking unit using funnel system. Journal of Energy StorageNydal, Ole Jørgen. (2023) Heat Storage for Cooking: A Discussion on Requirements and Concepts. EnergiesCooking with solar ovens in sub-Saharan Africa, Norwegian SciTech NewsHere are some background documents that describe the problem over time:Joseph Elasu, et al.(2023) Drivers of household transition to clean energy fuels: A systematic review of evidence,Renewable and Sustainable Energy Transition.World Bank. (2011). Household Cookstoves, Environment, Health, and Climate Change: A New Look at an Old Problem. Washington, DC: World Bank.Ideas? Feedback? Email me at nancy.bazilchuk@ntnu.no Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Disrupt Development
7. Oh Sudan - The ebyeshongoro Series

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 5:07


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Disrupt Development
6. Ebyeshongoro - The ebyeshongoro Series.

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2024 6:20


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Disrupt Development
5. Why I love D.C - The ebyeshongoro Series.

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 4:41


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Africalink | Deutsche Welle
Will Uganda change its law to extend Museveni's presidency?

Africalink | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 26:37


Uganda is considering denying citizens the chance to vote for their president, with tentative plans to have lawmakers elect one instead. Critics see the move as a way for President Yoweri Museveni to hold onto power. Josey Mahachi talks to Adolf Mbeine, a political scientist at Makerere University and DW correspondent Frank Yiga in Uganda.

The Intelligent Community
"Robot for Mayor" A Conversation with Dr. Norman Jacknis, Part 2

The Intelligent Community

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2024 27:15


In a year when democracies around the world go to the voting polls to select leaders and representatives in nations and local towns and regions, we see much has changed due to an adoption of the “Intelligent Community” idea and through the evolution of technologies like broadband and AI, which have crept into our daily lives.  The COVID Pandemic altered our rhythms and impacted our local economies, especially commercial real estate, healthcare advances and the nature of work.   Can it be very long before we elect a robot for mayor? What is the new normal with AI in our communities?  Are the forces too overwhelming or are we managing? Picking up on ICF's July 2024 webinar “Sharing Public Spaces with Robots” Lou went to the “bullpen” to bring in ICF's Senior Fellow, Dr. Norman Jacknis to ask him what his research and teaching has revealed. Norm, who leads ICF's Analysts also shares his views about this year's Top7 Intelligent Communities, one of which will succeed Binh Duong, Vietnam as Intelligent Community of the Year! Dr. Jacknis has decades of executive and leadership experience in the public and private sectors. He has successfully led organizations to adopt innovations, creatively use technology, and embrace data-driven cultures. Dr. Jacknis is currently Professor of Practice in the Innovation and Entrepreneurship program of the business school of Northeastern University. Prior to that, for eight years, he was on the full- time faculty of Columbia University, teaching machine learning and artificial intelligence, as well as product design, in its Executive Master's degree program for technology leaders. He is also Senior Fellow of the global Intelligent Community Forum, where he has worked for years with regional/state and local public officials and businesses on the intelligent use of technology to improve quality of life and the built environment. Government Technology Magazine selected him as one of the nation's “Top 25 Doers, Dreamers and Drivers who, using technology ... broke bureaucratic inertia to better serve the public”. Under his leadership, Westchester County won numerous awards, including the Center for Digital Government's top ten digital counties in the country, American City & County's Crown Communities Award for technology and was selected as one of the top seven Intelligent Communities in the world. Among many activities beyond his work, he is Chairman Emeritus and former President of the regional chapter of the national association of chief information and technology officers (SIM) as well as Vice Chair of the Westchester County Community College Board Of Trustees. Dr. Jacknis received his Doctorate, Master's and Bachelor's degrees from Princeton University. He also studied for a semester at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda and has graduated from executive courses at Harvard University.

Disrupt Development
4. Who shapes the Narrative - The ebyeshongoro Series.

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2024 3:37


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Disrupt Development
3. EA Bureau Chief - The ebyeshongoro Series.

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 4:26


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

The Intelligent Community
“Robot for Mayor” A Conversation with Dr. Norman Jacknis, Part 1

The Intelligent Community

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 23:39


In a year when democracies around the world go to the voting polls to select leaders and representatives in nations and local towns and regions, we see much has changed due to an adoption of the “Intelligent Community” idea and through the evolution of technologies like broadband and AI, which have crept into our daily lives.  The COVID Pandemic altered our rhythms and impacted our local economies, especially commercial real estate, healthcare advances and the nature of work.   Can it be very long before we elect a robot for mayor? What is the new normal with AI in our communities?  Are the forces too overwhelming or are we managing? Picking up on ICF's July 2024 webinar “Sharing Public Spaces with Robots” Lou went to the “bullpen” to bring in ICF's Senior Fellow, Dr. Norman Jacknis to ask him what his research and teaching has revealed. Norm, who leads ICF's Analysts also shares his views about this year's Top7 Intelligent Communities, one of which will succeed Binh Duong, Vietnam as Intelligent Community of the Year! Dr. Jacknis has decades of executive and leadership experience in the public and private sectors. He has successfully led organizations to adopt innovations, creatively use technology, and embrace data-driven cultures. Dr. Jacknis is currently Professor of Practice in the Innovation and Entrepreneurship program of the business school of Northeastern University. Prior to that, for eight years, he was on the full- time faculty of Columbia University, teaching machine learning and artificial intelligence, as well as product design, in its Executive Master's degree program for technology leaders. He is also Senior Fellow of the global Intelligent Community Forum, where he has worked for years with regional/state and local public officials and businesses on the intelligent use of technology to improve quality of life and the built environment. Government Technology Magazine selected him as one of the nation's “Top 25 Doers, Dreamers and Drivers who, using technology ... broke bureaucratic inertia to better serve the public”. Under his leadership, Westchester County won numerous awards, including the Center for Digital Government's top ten digital counties in the country, American City & County's Crown Communities Award for technology and was selected as one of the top seven Intelligent Communities in the world. Among many activities beyond his work, he is Chairman Emeritus and former President of the regional chapter of the national association of chief information and technology officers (SIM) as well as Vice Chair of the Westchester County Community College Board Of Trustees. Dr. Jacknis received his Doctorate, Master's and Bachelor's degrees from Princeton University. He also studied for a semester at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda and has graduated from executive courses at Harvard University.

Disrupt Development
2. A prayer for a sieged people

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 3:13


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

The Ugandan Boy Talk Show
TUBTS PODCAST Ep216: The Intersection of Poetry, AI, and Faith: A Conversation with Irene Mutuzo

The Ugandan Boy Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2024 52:19


In this episode, we sit down with Irene Mutuzo, a young lecturer at Makerere University and an award-winning spoken word artist. Irene shares her inspiring journey in poetry, her deep passion for AI and academics, and how her love for God has been the driving force behind her success. Join us for an insightful conversation on creativity, technology, and faith, and discover the powerful ways in which Irene weaves these worlds together.#chatgpt #academia #poetry

Disrupt Development
1. Cooperation - The ebyeshongoro Series

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 5:31


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Disrupt Development
0. Introduction to The ebyeshongoro Series

Disrupt Development

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024 3:20


Twasiima Bigirwa in collaboration with Disrupt Development present to you, The ebyeshongoro Series.The series is inspired and drawn from Twasiima's debut collection of poems titled ebyeshongoro bya Debra (songs of Debra). ebyeshongoro bya Debra is a collection of poems written in runyankore and english that chronicle the times we find ourselves in, the state of the world and the feelings of our hearts. Using humour, wit, and honest recollections, Twasiima looks at the ways our histories continue to influence our current times and makes demands of us to sit with both the contradictions and un-comfortabilities that emerge from current events and geopolitical shapings. As she writes Twasiima intends to inspire others who read to sit with the truths of our world and societies and from there imagine something new and liberatory.The poems speak to some of the pressing development challenges of our time; from the crises in Sudan and Palestine, the ways in which media and narratives continue to perpetuate harm, questions of systemic remedy with reparations and so on, and so forth. The collection is a total of forty-four poems and in this series, Twasiima reads and reflects on nine poems.Twasiima Bigirwa is an African writer, interested in the ways history has been shaped and altered, and dedicated to the work of conjuring into existence new worlds. Her work is founded on undoing and reconstructing from the colonial imaginations and focuses on exploring paths towards liberation. Twasiima has several years of experience working within the development sector and works to support organisations and individuals that are looking to review and invest in new ways to include a decolonial praxis to international development. She has extended experience serving as a community mobiliser and organiser and believes deeply that the work of movements that exist on the peripheries of society are crucial to our collective liberation. Twasiima has an LL.B. from Makerere University and an LL.M. from Georgetown University – LawCenter.

Podcasts from the Cochrane Library
What are healthcare workers' views, experiences and practices regarding their informal use of personal mobile phones to support their work?

Podcasts from the Cochrane Library

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 7:25


Mobile phones feature widely in the delivery of health care, and they are also used informally by people delivering this care. This is explored in an August 2024 Cochrane qualitative evidence synthesis of healthcare workers' use of their own phones at work. In this podcast, two of the authors, Nelson Sewankambo from Makerere University in Uganda and Claire Glenton from the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences talk about why they did the review and its findings.

Podcasts from the Cochrane Library
What are healthcare workers' views, experiences and practices regarding their informal use of personal mobile phones to support their work?

Podcasts from the Cochrane Library

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 7:25


Mobile phones feature widely in the delivery of health care, and they are also used informally by people delivering this care. This is explored in an August 2024 Cochrane qualitative evidence synthesis of healthcare workers' use of their own phones at work. In this podcast, two of the authors, Nelson Sewankambo from Makerere University in Uganda and Claire Glenton from the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences talk about why they did the review and its findings.

New Vision Podcast
How to control anger

New Vision Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 12:40


Around Uganda: Why are we very angry and how can we control anger? Raziah Athman speaks with Dr. Joan Amongin, a psychiatry resident at Makerere University, about anger management. 

Maghrib in Past & Present | Podcasts
Food Crisis, the International Food Regime, and Endless Agrarian Modernization in the MENA Region

Maghrib in Past & Present | Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 50:44


Episode 185: Food Crisis, the International Food Regime, and Endless Agrarian Modernization in the MENA Regio The agrarian and food crisis in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have re-emerged vigorously to the attention of global development agencies and governments in coincidence with the Russia-Ukraine war. The food crisis has  been interpreted through a number of tropes, including Malthusian, environmentally determinist, security and development economics approaches. Within the dominant mainstream discourse, the MENA region is often depicted as a homogenous geographical area characterized by dryness, infertile lands and poor water resources. How did imperialism, colonialism and the Cold War influence the MENA food systems? What were the effects of agrarian modernizations, trade liberalization and neoliberalism on the agricultural systems in the region? These are some questions that this presentation tries to answer using a geographical and historical-comparative analysis, through a food regimes lens. Understanding contemporary social relations dynamics cannot be limited to the recent period. Agriculture and food in the MENA region are anchored in the history of power relations ruled by flows of capital and the shaping of ecological transformations during the longue durée of capitalism and its corresponding modes of control and regulation. Giuliano Martiniello is Associate Professor of Political Science and Political Economy at the Faculy of Law, Political and Social Sciences, Université Internationale de Rabat and Adjunct Associate Professor at the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences, American University of Beirut. Prior to joining UIR, he was Assistant Professor at the American University of Beirut (2015-2020), Research Fellow at the Makerere Institute of Social Research, Makerere University (2011-2015), and Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for Civil Society, University of KwaZulu-Natal (2012-2013). He got his PhD in Politics at the School of Politics and International Studies of the University of Leeds (2011). He is broadly interested in the political economy, political sociology and political ecology of agrarian and environmental change. His research interests include land regimes, food and farming systems, large-scale land enclosures and contract farming, conservation and deforestation, rural social conflicts and agrarian movements in Africa and the Middle East. He has published articles in a number of top-ranking international journals such as World Development, Journal of Peasant Studies, Journal of Agrarian Change, Geoforum, Land Use Policy, Food Secuirty, Globalizations, Agrarian South: a Journal of Political Economy; Third World Quarterly, Review of African Political Economy, among others. He is Contributing Editor of the Review of African Political Economy and Associate Editor of Agrarian South: A Journal of Political Economy. He is co-editor of the book Uganda: The Dynamics of Neoliberal Transformation, London, Zed Books (2018).  This episode is part of the CAORC and Carnegie Corporation of New York program "The Maghrib From the Peripheries: Property, Natural Resources and Social Actors in the Maghrib". It was recorded via zoom on the 19th of October, 2023 by the American Institute for Maghrib Studies (AIMS). Edited by Hayet Yebbous Bensaid, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).  

Scope Conditions Podcast
What College Dorms can teach us about Culture, with Joan Ricart-Huguet

Scope Conditions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 78:59


Today on Scope Conditions: college dorms shed light on where group culture comes from and how it molds us.At Harry Potter's alma mater, each new student is assigned to a House that aligns with their true character. The mystical Sorting Hat takes the courageous ones and sorts them into House Gryffindor, while the studious know-it-alls go to Ravenclaw. The Sorting Hat may be fiction, but it's actually a lot like life. Much of the social world works this way: whether by assignment or by self-selection, people often end up in social environments that already fit with their pre-existing beliefs and traits.For social scientists, what's often called homophily – this tendency for like to attract like – can make it difficult to study the impact of social context itself. Do people tend to believe and act like those around them because they're influenced by their surroundings, or because they're drawn to places that already fit their pre-existing characteristics?Our guest today, Dr. Joan Ricart-Huguet, found a real-world social setting that helps him untangle these possibilities. At East Africa's oldest institution of higher education, Makerere University in Uganda, incoming students have for decades been allocated to their residence halls by lottery, rather than by personality type. For Joan, Makerere's randomly assigned dorms have been the perfect laboratory for studying how the cultural characteristics of a social organization arise, endure, and shape people's beliefs and habits over time. Joan is an assistant professor of political science at Loyola University Maryland, and we talk with him about a pair of recent articles he wrote on cultural emergence, persistence, and transmission. Joan tells us about the months of in-depth interviews and immersive fieldwork he conducted on the Makerere campus as well as the natural experiment afforded by random residential assignment that allowed him to test alternative theories of cultural differentiation, reproduction, and impact.For example, Joan tells us the stories of how distinct hall cultures emerged historically at Makerere – how Livingston Hall came to be known as the residence of respectful gentlemen while Lumumba Hall earned a reputation for rowdy activism. And we learn about the short- and long-term causal effects of these distinct hall cultures on the young adults assigned by chance to live within them.Works cited in this episode:Geertz, C. 1973. The Interpretation of Cultures. Basic Books.Guiso, L., P. Sapienza, and L. Zingales. 2006. "Does Culture Affect Economic Outcomes?'" The Journal of Economic Perspectives 20(2): 23-48.Henrich, J. P. 2017. The Secret of Our Success: How Culture is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species, and Making Us Smarter. Princeton University Press.Mead, M. 1956. New Lives for Old: Cultural Transformation – Manus, 1928-1953. William Morrow and Company.Paller, J. W. 2020. Democracy in Ghana: Everyday Politics in Urban Africa. Cambridge University Press.Ricart-Huguet, J. 2022. "Why Do Different Cultures Form and Persist? Learning from the Case of Makerere University." The Journal of Modern African Studies, 60(4): 429-456.Ricart-Huguet, J. and E. L. Paluck. 2023. "When the Sorting Hat Sorts Randomly: A Natural Experiment on Culture." Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 18(1): 39-73.Ross, M.H. 2000. “Culture and Identity in Comparative Political Analysis”. In Culture and Politics: A Reader, edited by Lane Crothers and Charles Lockhart. Palgrave Macmillan.Sewell Jr., W. H. 1999. “The Concept(s) of Culture”. In Beyond the Cultural Turn: New Directions in the Study of Society and Culture, edited by V. E. Bonnell and L. Hunt. University of California Press.

Ugandan Art Speaks Out
Spotlight on the Stage: The Importance of Theatre and Film in Uganda

Ugandan Art Speaks Out

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2024 31:25


In this episode, we have a fascinating conversation with a student who has immersed herself in the world of theatre and film at Makerere University, one of Africa's oldest and most prestigious academic institutions. We delve into the careers of these budding artists and learn about the hurdles they overcome and the opportunities they seize to pursue their passion for performing arts and cinematography in Uganda. Our discussion goes beyond the surface to explore the profound social and cultural impact of theatre and film in Uganda. We unravel the potential of these creative mediums as powerful tools for education, empowerment and expression. By breaking down stereotypes, we aim to celebrate the rich diversity and boundless creativity that characterises the theatre and film landscape in Uganda. Join us as we put the spotlight on the stage and showcase the multi-faceted importance of theatre and film in this vibrant African country.Support the Show.Listen to Ugandan Art Speaks Out on all podcast platforms. For more information and to explore further, visit our website at https://www.ugandanartspeaksout.com/Contact us at adnan@omuti.org or director@omuti.org

Health Check
Dengue Outbreak in Latin America

Health Check

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 26:29


Carnival hits the streets in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil this week. As well as preparations for the crowds and colourful processions, health authorities have also been putting in extra measures to try to contain a huge outbreak of dengue fever. Last week a health emergency was declared in the city. And as Claudia hears from Peruvian health journalist Fabiola Torres, cases are rising to levels not seen for decades across the whole of Latin America. Consultant in public health Dr Ike Anya is in the Health Check studio to take a deeper look at Dengue. He also brings news from Alaska, USA where an elderly man has become the first person to die from Alaskapox, a viral disease more commonly found in small animals like shrews and voles. And could new UK research on 50 thousand people's blood, help us get one step closer to a predictive blood test for Alzheimer's disease?Claudia and Ike hear from British journalist Mike Powell who has serious kidney failure. Last week Mike's kidney transplant operation had to be cancelled due to his donor's health. He's hoping for some better news this week.And Claudia speaks to Dr Ruth Namazzi at Makerere University in Uganda. She is co-author of new research that suggests that a common drug for treating the symptoms of sickle cell anaemia could have a transformative effect amongst children with the blood condition in Sub-Saharan Africa.Presenter: Claudia Hammond Producers: Clare Salisbury & Ben Motley Assistant Producer: Imaan Moin

Ugandan Art Speaks Out
Changing the Agu narrative through drama

Ugandan Art Speaks Out

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2024 27:01


In this episode we explore how performing arts can be used to address social issues such as the Agu in Northern Uganda, who are said to be a group of war-torn youth. We learn about the research carried out by Makerere University, one of Africa's leading universities, and how they developed a theatre performance to change the story of the Agu. We interview some of the researchers and performers and learn how they are using theatre as a tool for social change, empowerment and healing. We also discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the Agu in their post-war context and how the performing arts can help them build a better future. Join us to experience the power and potential of theatre to transform the lives of the Agu in Northern Uganda.

The top AI news from the past week, every ThursdAI

Here's a TL;DR and show notes links* Open Source LLMs* New WizardCoder 33B V1.1 - 79% on HumanEval (X, HF)* Tekniums Hermes 2 on SOLAR 10.7B (X, HF)* Microsoft - E5 SOTA text embeddings w/ Mistral (X, HF, Paper, Yams Thread)* Big CO LLMs + APIs* Samsung is about to announce some AI stuff* OpenAI GPT store to come next week* Perplexity announces a $73.6 Series B round* Vision* Alibaba - QWEN-VL PLUS was updated to 14B (X, Demo)* OCU SeeAct - GPT4V as a generalist web agent if grounded (X, Paper)* Voice & Audio* Nvidia + Suno release NeMo Parakeet beats Whisper on english ASR (X, HF, DEMO)* Tools & Agents* Stanford - Mobile ALOHA bot - Open source cooking robot (Website, X thread)Open Source LLMsWizardCoder 33B reaches a whopping 79% on HumanEval @pass1State of the art LLM coding in open source is here. A whopping 79% on HumanEval, with Wizard Finetuning DeepSeek Coder to get to the best Open Source coder, edging closer to GPT4 and passing GeminiPro and GPT3.5

Daybreak Africa  - Voice of America
Daybreak Africa: Sudan Peace Talk Resumes in Saudi Arabia - October 27, 2023

Daybreak Africa - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 29:59


On Daybreak Africa: Saudi officials welcome the resumption of Sudan Peace talks. Plus, the World Food Program suspends part of its assistance in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. We'll speak with a member of the party of Senegal opposition leader Ousmane Sonko for an update on his hunger strike. Nigeria's main opposition is disappointed by the Supreme Court's affirmation of Tinubu's election. In Uganda, the Makerere University faculty academic staff association reject the introduction of a biometric attendance management system. The White House says Hamas civilian casualty claims are not reliable. For this and more tune to Daybreak Africa!

Capital Fm Uganda
#DesertIslandDiscs with NUP National Treasurer Benjamin Katana

Capital Fm Uganda

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2023 63:20


National Unity Platform National (NUP) treasurer has also graduated with a Master's Degree in Law at Makerere University. Partner at Pace Advocates, Lawyer, Immigration Law Consultant. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/capitalfmuganda/support

Africa Science Focus
Antiretrovirals in chicken feed

Africa Science Focus

Play Episode Play 56 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 30:01


In this first episode of the ‘Science Explained' series by Africa Science Focus, we dive into a study by Makerere University that uncovered traces of the antiretroviral (ARV) drug Efavirenz, used for HIV/AIDS treatment, in chicken feed in Uganda. Our reporter, Halima Athumani, also spoke with lead researcher, Hussein Oria, who let us know the gravity of using unapproved drugs in animal feed. We also investigate the motivations of poultry farmers, how they source ARVs, and shed light on the troubling implications. ------------------------------------------------Do you have any comments, questions or feedback about our podcast episodes? Let us know at podcast@scidev.netAfrica Science Focus is produced by SciDev.Net and distributed in association with your local radio station.This piece was produced by SciDev.Net's Sub-Saharan Africa English desk. Do you have any comments, questions or feedback about our podcast episodes? Let us know at podcast@scidev.net

Latitude Adjustment
112: Colonialism in Global Public Health

Latitude Adjustment

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 61:03


Why don't we see more African researchers presenting at global Public Health conferences and in US and European research journals? Who determines which public health issues are prioritized in Africa? What is Public Health and “Vaccine Apartheid”? What do these insights reveal about the current state of our Public Health discourse on the global scale?  It's impossible to isolate the conversation around public health in the Global South from the topic of colonialism and anti-Blackness more generally. What's more, while Africa and Africans continue to be presented with unique challenges and forms of discrimination, it would be a tragic oversight to assume that the factors contributing to global health disparities are limited to the African context. Insights that are applicable to Africa, are not only applicable to the Global South, and to minority populations in the Global North more generally, but these insights frequently map out the grounds and the various avenues for solidarity amongst similarly impacted populations and all people looking to dismantle oppressive structures. Dr. Catherine Kyobutungi is the Executive Director of the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC). She holds a Ph.D. in Epidemiology and a Master of Science in Community Health and Health Management from the University of Heidelberg. Prior to her graduate studies, Catherine studied medicine at Makerere University, Kampala, after which she worked as a medical officer in Western Uganda for three years. In 2018, Catherine was elected as a Fellow of the  African Academy of Sciences and in 2019, she was selected  as a Joep Lange Chair at the University of Amsterdam; a position in which she investigates chronic disease management in African countries. She is the co-director of the Consortium for Advanced Research Training in Africa (CARTA), a program that seeks to build and strengthen the capacity of African research leaders and has trained more than 230 PhD fellows in eight African universities.   Support independent and in-depth coverage of the underreported issues that shape our world, by supporting Latitude Adjustment Podcast on Patreon today!  

The Nonlinear Library
EA - MHFC Spring Grants Round by wtroy

The Nonlinear Library

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 2:09


Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: MHFC Spring Grants Round, published by wtroy on June 30, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum. The Mental Health Funding Circle recently completed our second round of funding. We are very happy to support great organizations working on highly impactful mental health interventions. Our next open funding round will be held in the Fall - applications will be due October 1st, with final decisions made in early November. For more information, visit our website. This round, MHFC members disbursed $789,833 to the following organizations, institutions and individuals: $70,000 to Fine Mind for their direct service work on depression in northern Uganda. $78,225 to Phlourish for guided self-help in the Philippines. $50,000 to Happier Lives Institute for continued research on subjective wellbeing metrics and general operating support. $65,000 to Overcome to support their work offering free online therapy. $153,000 to Eggshells for their work on digital guided self-help. $120,000 to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to station task-shifting youth therapy practitioners in HIV clinics in Botswana. $24,000 to School of Hard Knocks to support lay practitioner interpersonal therapy for youth in South Africa. $30,000 to CEARCH for meta research into effective mental health interventions. $99,360 to Columbia University and Makerere University for capacity building for interpersonal therapy in primary care in Uganda. $30,000 to Tata Institute of Social Sciences to support research on interpersonal therapy in primary schools in India. $70,248 to Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute for research on suicidality and suicide prevention in urban settings in Zambia. All funding decisions are made personally by individual circle members and do not necessarily reflect the priorities of the circle. For any information about funding or membership, please reach out! Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org

Big Conversations by Ordinary People
#125 - Birimumaaso Rogers Tenyigwa

Big Conversations by Ordinary People

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 152:18


In this podcast conversation, we had the opportunity to speak with a software engineering student from Makerere University in Uganda. We discussed their background and journey into the field, explored the software engineering landscape in Uganda, and dove into technical discussions about their favorite programming languages, frameworks, and tools. We also delved into the role of software engineering in addressing societal challenges, such as digital transformation, e-government services, healthcare, agriculture, education, and environmental sustainability. The conversation provided insights into Tenyigwa's experiences, perspectives, and aspirations for the future of software engineering in Uganda and globally. Listen to more on: - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3iDhPBe - Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3iDEu0p - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3jEh9Np - Anchor: https://anchor.fm/bcop​ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bcop/message

The Healthcare Policy Podcast ®  Produced by David Introcaso
Ms. Kelly Willis Discusses the IPCC's "Last Warning" Report and the Upcoming COP 28 Meeting (April 18th)

The Healthcare Policy Podcast ® Produced by David Introcaso

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 35:11


This past March 20th the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) published its fourth and last sixth assessment cycle (AR6) report.  This last report integrates the main findings of the IPCC's three, sixth assessment working group reports published over the past 18 months.  The report has been informally termed the “last warning” since the IPCC 7th assessment work will likely not be published until after 2030 - at which time we'll know whether we have succeeded or not in reducing CO2e emissions by approximately 45% in order to limit avg global warming to the preferred Paris climate accord goal of 1.5C.  Among other conclusions the IPCC authors warned, “There is a rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a livable and sustainable future for all.”  “The choices and actions implemented in this decade will have impacts now and for thousands of years.”   The UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, termed this last report “a clarion call to massively fast-track climate efforts by every country, every sector and on every timeframe.”  An excellent summary of the AR6 fourth report was published in late March by Carbon Brief, at: https://www.carbonbrief.org/carbon-briefs-definitive-guide-to-the-entire-ipcc-sixth-assessment-cycle/.This 35-minute interview Ms. Willis discusses Malaria No More's work, related/relevant IPCC findings and those in context of her attendance last month at a climate/health summit meeting in Abu Dhabi held in preparation for subsequent related discussions during this coming December's IPCC COP 28 meeting also taking place in the UAE.  Ms. Kelly Willis is currently the Managing Director of Strategic Initiatives at Malaria No More.  Ms. Willis has more than 20 years of experience working in infectious disease and global health, helping to build permanent capacity in health systems throughout sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, in roles including Senior Vice President at United States Pharmacopeia, Executive Director of Accordia Global Health Foundation and through her consulting firm Willis Solutions LLC.  Ms. Willis's field experience includes several years living in East Africa where she helped launch and support the Infectious Diseases Institute at Makerere University and led a multi-year research program to better understand the impact of medical training programs on standards of care and health outcomes.  Prior to that, Ms. Willis spent five years in multiple finance and economics management roles at Pfizer where she also served as a Global Health Fellow in Uganda.   She holds a Distinguished Alumni award from Michigan State University where she earned a BA in French and an MBA in Supply Chain Management.The IPCC report is at: https://report.ipcc.ch/ar6syr/pdf/IPCC_AR6_SYR_SPM.pdf.   This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thehealthcarepolicypodcast.com

LNXdance Podcast
013 Sip & Chat: Mariana Ranz

LNXdance Podcast

Play Episode Play 33 sec Highlight Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 41:30


Welcome back to another season of LNXdance with your Co-Hosts, Marcus & Mari!Join us for this special episode as we welcome the amazing Mariana Ranz (BFA, MA), to our podcast. Check out her story below and listen in to see how Community Outreach became such a big part of her life. We are so fortunate to have this episode for you all, and know there is a lot to take away from her story! Mariana Ranz is originally from Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where she began her ballet training under the direction of Gryssel Berlioz. Later she joined and performed with Compañia de Danza Bellart. At the age of 18, Ranz relocated to the US to pursue  higher education. She graduated from University of California, Irvine and has a BA in Dance and in Psychology and Social Behaviors. In 2012, Ranz was accepted into NYU Steinhardt Dance Education Program and graduated in 2014 with a MA for Teaching Dance in the Professions: American Ballet Theatre (ABT) Pedagogy. She is an ABT® Certified Teacher in Pre-Primary through Level Seven of the ABT® National Training Curriculum. As part of her career development, she traveled to Uganda in 2014 where she had the opportunity to collaborate with Ugandan dance educators from Makerere University, the Kampala Ballet and Modern Dance School. Throughout her career, she has served on the dance faculties of the American Ballet Theatre, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Hunter College Elementary School, and The Spence School.Comparte el amor  with our guest by leaving a comment, let us know what your favorite part of this chat was. We want to send a big thank you to Mariana for making this Sip & Chat happen and for sharing her story with us!Ballet Hispanico's Community Arts Partnership: https://www.ballethispanico.org/communityMariana on IG: https://www.instagram.com/marianaranzt/ LNX x FuegoDanceShoes Brand AmbassadorsAñadele Sazón by wearing Fuego Shoes! Use our code LNX10 for 10% off. Click the link to learn more!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the Show.--Brought to you by MotionScoop Dance Corp, LNXdance Podcast is a series of conversations FOR Latinx dancers and educators BY Latinx dancers and educators. Join Mari & Marcus -M&M- as they dive deep into important topics in the dance industry and explore how being part of the Latinx community affects us, our contributions, decisions, and careers. We hope you enjoy our sip and chat, don't forget to subscribe and leave a comment with what you loved, questions and topics for next time! Follow us on our Instagram page LNXdance to interact with our community and with us.For business inquiries and to apply to be a guest, please email motionscoopinfo@gmail.com ¡Adiós! Hosts: Marcus Mantilla-Valentin & Mari VasconezSponsors: MotionScoop Dance Corp.

The Ugandan Boy Talk Show
Best English News Anchor | Arinaitwe Hannah | Ep131

The Ugandan Boy Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2023 47:29


In this episode I host Arinaitwe Hannah, Hannah is a student of journalism at Makerere University, a radio presenter at  @powerfmug, host of yo space on  @UBCug, and the 88th GRC  @Makerere. She is the winner of the Best news anchor challenge  @MediaChallengeInitiative  On the podcast, Hannah talks about her school background and her journey into journalism. she has written a lot of blog posts about different topics including body shaming and many others. Tune in to listen to Hannah's journey. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bonny-kibuuka/message

EduFuturists
Edufuturists #207 - Yiya with Erin Fitzgerald & Samson Wambuzi

EduFuturists

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 60:52


Samson, a Yiya co-founder and 2019 Obama Africa Leader is a physics teacher with a Bachelor of Science in education from Makerere University and a veteran of Uganda's education system. He grew up in a rural area with limited resources. Yiya's mission has been shaped by his childhood experiences. He has a genius talent for educational design and a deep passion to leverage the power of experiential learning to end cycles of poverty endemic in Uganda. Samson's passion drives him to create learning experiences full of educational games that demonstrate difficult topics in a student-friendly way. Erin, a Yiya co-founder, holds a Bachelor of Science from MIT as well as a Masters of Education from Marquette University. Her educational career began as a teacher for America fellow teaching high school math in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She has over a decade of experience in secondary STEM education, teacher training, and curriculum development, and has worked with educators in the United States, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Sudan. Erin is interested in science and technology knowledge and ideas, as well as assisting young people in developing critical thinking and problem-solving skills. #Yiya #Education #Innovation Follow us on Twitter https://www.twitter.com/edufuturists Check out all past episodes at https://www.edufuturists.com Subscribe on iTunes https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/edufuturists/id1347592880 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edufuturistspodcast/message

RX RADIO - The Fatboy Show
Makerere Suspends Lecturer Filmed Slapping Student

RX RADIO - The Fatboy Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 12:23


A lecturer at Makerere University's department of Social Works and Social Administration, School of Social Sciences has been suspended after he was filming repeatedly slapping a student in class following an altercation.

No White Saviors Podcast
White Saviorism / White Supremacy In The Legal Guardianship & Adoption Practices In Uganda

No White Saviors Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 46:43


In today's episode, the NWS team has a conversation with Okot Robert about white saviorism/ supremacy in the legal guardianship and adoption practices in Uganda. Mr. Okot Robert is an Advocate of the High Court of Uganda and NWS Legal advisor. He holds a Bachelor of Laws (Hons.) degree from Makerere University and a Post Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from Law Development Center, Kampala. He is a member of the Uganda Law Society, East Africa Law Society, and Network Of Public Interest Lawyers. Mr. Okot has previously offered legal advisory services and representation to a number of corporate entities doing business within and outside Uganda. He has also worked with a number of law firms in Uganda. Mr. Okot specializes in Regulation and Compliance Law, Corporate Law, Human Rights, and Legislative Advocacy.Listeners can support our work & the production of this podcast by signing up through Patreon.Connect with us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.You can also find us on our personal IG accounts:Alaso Olivia Patience - @olivia.risesLubega Wendy - @lubegawendyRwothomio Gabriel - @the.nilotic.1 Support the show

The Climate Question
How can we get more people on their bikes?

The Climate Question

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2022 27:10


Cycling is healthy, cheap - and as modes of transport go, they don't come much greener. Worldwide, transport is responsible for nearly a quarter of all carbon emissions, with road transport alone accounting for 75% of that. But so far, most discussions on greening the transport sector have focussed on electrifying our cars, trucks and buses – overlooking the vital role that bicycles could play in the climate transition. In fact, experts say that we're unlikely to meet our short-term climate goals without more people getting on their bikes. So what needs to change to make that happen? We look at what's been done on streets of Bogota, New York and Kampala to get more people cycling across the world. Presenters Kate Lamble and Neal Razzell are joined by: Janette Sadik-Khan, former Transport Commissioner of New York City Henk Swarttouw, President of the European Cyclists Federation and World Cycling Alliance Amanda Ngabirano, Lecturer in Urban Mobility at Makerere University, Kampala Jaime Ortiz Mariño, architect and organiser of the first ciclovía event in Bogotá Producer: Zoe Gelber Reporter: Laura Ubate in Bogotá Researchers: Immie Rhodes and Louise Parry Series Producer: Alex Lewis Editor: Richard Fenton-Smith Sound Mix: Tom Brignell

Elizabeth Kisaaka
THE ELIZTALKSHOW SERIES with Isaiah Mpiirwomugisha (Season three episode two) “TANDIIKA”

Elizabeth Kisaaka

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2022 13:37


“Don't let that inner demon to take control of you! Just give it a deaf ear.” Isaiah Mpiirwomugisha, a Makerere University guild president aspirant said in the Eliztalkshow series. Listen in as we tells us more about his journey and manifesto. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/liz-kisaka/message

Asian Studies Centre
Insecurities of Expulsion: Race, Violence, Citizenship and Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transregional Uganda

Asian Studies Centre

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 21:06


Anneeth Kaur Hundle (UC Irvine) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda's Asians and the Remaking of Nationality In this short talk, I offer a synopsis of my forthcoming book and its core interventions. Namely, I recenter contemporary Uganda within scholarly discussion on the 1972 Asian expulsion. I assess the exceptional ways in which the 1972 Asian expulsion is understood within global knowledge formations, arguing that expulsion is a “critical event” with lingering effects and affects in territorial Uganda and its diasporas, which I situate as the “insecurities of expulsion." Despite the historic expulsion of Ugandan Asians, South Asian-ness continues to define the very constitution of the Ugandan nation and the normative construction of (racially nativist) Ugandan national identity. Ugandan postcolonial governments have shifted from policies and practices of Asian racial expulsion to maintaining racial exclusion while incorporating Ugandan Asian returnees and South Asian subjects as racial non-citizens and economic subjects. I utilize the post-liberal democratic analytic of “non-citizenship” to explore gradations in substantive privileges, rights and entitlements and exclusions across Ugandan Asian returnee and new South Asian migrant communities across old and new imperial and sub-imperial formations, orienting us to the study of Afro-Asian entanglements and the broader decolonization of political community in both national and transregional scope. Ultimately, I am proposing an “anthropology of Afro-Asian entanglements”-an arena of study that is concerned with the ways in which indigenous Africans and South Asians are bound together in relations of interdependency, hierarchy, intimacy and estrangement both within territorial Uganda and its transregional geographies across the Indian Ocean and North Atlantic. Anneeth Kaur Hundle is assistant professor of anthropology and Dhan Kaur Sahota Presidential Chair of Sikh Studies in the Department of Anthropology at University of California, Irvine (UCI). Prior to UCI, she was Visiting Professor at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at UC Merced, and Research Associate at the Makerere Institute of Social Research (MISR) at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda. She is completing a book manuscript entitled, Insecurities of Expulsion: Race, Violence, Citizenship and Afro-Asian Relationalities in Transregional Uganda and beginning work on two new projects on Sikh feminisms and the intersections of Sikh Studies and university studies. She is also involved in new research clusters on Global Africa/Global Blackness, Interrogating South Asia/diasporas and Decolonizing Universities in Global Perspective with her colleagues at UCI.

Foresight Africa Podcast
Re-approaching Africa's economic integration agenda

Foresight Africa Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 44:57


Julius Kiiza, professor of political economy of development at Uganda's Makerere University, discusses Africa's regional integration efforts as well as the integral role of women and technology in the success of the endeavor. Show notes and transcript: https://brook.gs/3QCf715  Foresight Africa podcast is part of the Brookings Podcast Network. Subscribe and listen on Apple, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and wherever you listen to podcasts. Send feedback email to podcasts@brookings.edu, and follow and tweet at @policypodcasts on Twitter.

Big Conversations by Ordinary People
Episode 66: Alfdaniels Mabingo

Big Conversations by Ordinary People

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 107:10


Alfdaniels Mabingo, PhD. is a lecturer of dance at Makerere University. His book, Ubuntu as Dance Pedagogy in Uganda, is available at all book stores. In this conversation we talk about dance: as a language, as a culture and as an act. Enjoy Listen to more on: Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3iDhPBe Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3iDEu0p Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3jEh9Np Anchor: https://anchor.fm/bcop​ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bcop/message

Big Ideas TXST
Episode 27: Russian sanctions with Andrew Ojede

Big Ideas TXST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 30:01


Andrew Ojede, an associate professor in the Department of Finance and Economics at Texas State University joins the Big Ideas TXST podcast to discuss the impact that international sanctions are having in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. When Russian forces crossed the border into Ukraine on February 24, the international response was swift. The United States, European Union and other nations around the world imposed strict and far-reaching economic sanctions on Russia that far exceeded previous sanction efforts. From targeting Russian banking interests, oligarchs and Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, the unprecedented financial pressures are having a crippling effect on the Russian economy… but also spilling over to affect those countries imposing the sanctions as well. Ojede is the co-founder of the Africa Policy & Analytics Group. He earned his B.A. in economics from Makerere University, Uganda, his master's in economics from the University of North Texas and his Ph.D. in economics from Kansas State University. His research interests include international economics, macro economics, regional economic growth and international development. Further reading: Analysis of rouble currency crisis

No White Saviors Podcast
Ugandan Led NGO's and their Struggle with Missionary Community w/ Sharon Nyanjura

No White Saviors Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 41:30


In today's episode, the NWS team has a conversation with Sharon Nyanjura about the struggles faced by Ugandan-led NGOs with the missionary community.Sharon Nyanjura is a Ugandan, born in Kibuye village, Kamuli district. She grew up in Jinja town, in Jinja district, and later joined Makerere University where she graduated with Bachelors in industrial and organizational Psychology.She is the founder of Arise and shine Uganda, and also the founder of Finnkibu a business based in Finland, pouring into my home village of Kibuye in Kamuli district.Listeners can support our work & the production of this podcast by signing up through Patreon.ORVenmo: @nowhitesaviorsPayPalConnect with us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.You can also find us on our personal IG accounts:Alaso Olivia Patience - @olivia.risesKelsey Nielsen - @unpopularvoteLubega Wendy - @lubegawendyRwothomio Gabriel - @the.nilotic.1 Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=13938785)Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=13938785)

Comm Is Hot
Special Guest on Political Activism in Uganda

Comm Is Hot

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 43:21


Our special guest was born in Uganda but currently teaches at Tangaza University College in Nairobi, Kenya. He is an ordained and practicing Catholic priest with extensive experience in the field of Communication. He has two Masters Degrees – one in Journalism from Makerere University, Uganda's premier university; and another in Communication Studies from San Francisco State University. He got his doctorate in Communication from the University of Texas at Austin. He is passionate about social justice, and he has published journal articles on the subject. He uses his background in Communication as a ‘public intellectual' to write and to speak on matters of social justice in Uganda's secular media. I've been asked to protect his privacy from the government in Uganda by omitting his name from the bio. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comm-is-hot/support

Global Development Institute podcast
In Conversation: Shuaib Lwasa

Global Development Institute podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 30:51


In the latest episode of the GDI podcast Professor Shuaib Lwasa talks to Dr Seth Schindler. They discuss the recent COP in Glasgow, urban development, African cities and the Urban Action Lab. Dr. Shuaib Lwasa is Professor of Urban Sustainability at Makerere University, Uganda. He has worked extensively on interdisciplinary research projects focused on African cities but also in South Asia. He established and directed an Urban Action Research Lab in 2010 which has championed graduate research and training and incubating novel ideas of urban transformation and sustainability in partnership with low-income communities and vulnerable groups working in three research sites in Uganda. Seth Schindler is Senior Lecturer in Urban Development and Transformation in the Global Development Institute. His research is focused on large-scale urban and regional transformation initiatives that integrate cities into transnational urban systems. Seth is also co-research director of the African Cities Research Consortium, a six-year programme funded by the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, which seeks to generate new insights and approaches to tackle complex problems in Africa's rapidly changing cities. A transcript of this podcast is available here: https://hummedia.manchester.ac.uk/institutes/gdi/research/transcripts/in-conversation-shuaib-lwasa.pdf

The Sexual Violence Research Podcast

Children who are exposed to violence are more likely to become perpetrators or victims as adults. They may also suffer from a variety of lifelong issues, from mental health problems to obesity. That's why it's crucial to begin violence prevention interventions at a young age, and to get buy-in from parents. In this episode we find out how research projects are working to break the cycle of abuse and neglect by building positive and healthy family relationships. Hear from guests Dr Catherine Ward, clinical psychologist and research professor at the University of Cape Town, Gary Barker, CEO and founder of Promundo, and Professor Godfrey Siu from the Child Health and Development Centre at Makerere University. For more detailed analysis of the research we discuss in this episode, click here. Find out more at svri.org.

AMIA: Why Informatics? Podcasts
For Your Informatics: Episode 22- Women in Informatics Around the Globe

AMIA: Why Informatics? Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 22:05


Host – Adela Grando, PhD, Associate Professor, College of Health Solutions, Arizona State University   Guests - Josephine Nabukenya, PhD and Raniah Aldekhyyel, PhD    Dr. Nabukenya is an Associate Professor of Informatics and the former Dean of the School of Computing and Informatics Technology at Makerere University in Uganda. She founded and chairs the Health Informatics Research Group at the Makerere University to solve fundamental health challenges in Uganda, the African Region, and other low- and middle-income countries.   Dr. Aldekeyel is an Assistant Professor in health informatics at the College of Medicine, King Saud University in Saudi Arabia. She published this year a JAMIA paper on “What it means to be a woman in the field of biomedical informatics in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia”. She is a member of several committees to review health informatics standards and develop national-level training programs in Saudi Arabia.