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When Radio Sounds Like Home: Indigenous Community Radio and Epistemic Justice in India
In this blog, Aniruddha Jena reflects on his recent research published in Third World Quarterly on Indigenous community radio in India. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork at Radio Dhimsa in India’s Odisha, he explores how community radio can function as a space of epistemic justice, sustaining Indigenous language, cultural memory, and knowledge systems in the face…
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Peace, Politics, and Publishing in the Global South with Morten Bøås
From protesting apartheid in Oslo to conducting fieldwork in Liberia, Uganda, and the Sahel, Morten Bøås’ (Research Professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Norway) journey into peace and conflict studies is anything but conventional. In this Q&A with Purniya Awan, he reflects on personal moments, global struggles, and editorial insights that shaped his career and his…
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The Decolonisation of Niger Delta Oil Pollution Cases
Saba Naomi Attfield is a blogger, aspiring solicitor, and researcher specialising in Global Environment and Climate Change Law. In this blog post, Saba explores recent developments in transnational environmental litigation cases around the world through a decolonial lens. She also shares her own research on the potential of foreign direct liability litigation to address oil…
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World Indigenous Peoples Day: Truth, Memory, and the Path Towards Reconciliation
Purniya Awan, a Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies graduate from York University writes about her understanding of Indigenous histories as a Canadian, and how they have evolved from classroom silence to critical awareness.
