Copertina del podcast

Root of Conflict

  • A War Later | Juanita Velez

    7 GIU 2024 · How do stories give new perspectives to conflict and peace? In this episode, we speak with Juanita Vélez, a journalist and political scientist. She was the editor of La Silla Sur, a regional subsidiary of Colombian news website La Silla Vacía, focused on covering the implementation of the 2016 Peace Agreement in southern Colombia. She researches and writes journalistic stories on illegal armed groups, deforestation, and organized crime. She is also the author of A War Later, (Spanish: Una Guerra Después) a journalistic book that tells the stories of five Colombians impacted by the Peace Agreement made between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (the FARC). The book focuses not just on the former FARC combatants but also tells the stories of victims, military personnel, and government officials that weren’t covered in the broader news at the time. We discuss the framework of the peace agreement, the impacts of implementation, and the how Vélez built trust within communities to facilitate her journalism. https://youtu.be/o7xFIu3OJGM?si=PAUq4GfN5sOfnJHs. https://www.penguinlibros.com/co/tematicas/325508-libro-una-guerra-despues-9786287539297. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Paula Cadena Moreno and Hannah Balikci Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 53 min. 19 sec.
  • Power & Development | Raul Sanchez de la Sierra

    10 MAG 2024 · What is the role of narratives within the political economy of development? In this episode, we speak with Professor Raul Sanchez de la Sierra, an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy and Faculty Affiliate of the Pearson Institute. His research tackles problems in the economics of development, political economy, and conflict. He conducts most of his research in areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC); where he looks at the organization of society, the economics and psychology of armed groups, the emergence of state functions, and the economics of organized corruption, working closely with these actors, while also gathering detailed data for statistical analysis. We discuss Professor Sanchez de la Sierra’s path to working in the DRC and later involvement in Congo Calling, a documentary film that follows him and two other Europeans who work in various roles within the international development aid sector in the DRC. Later, we discuss his goals and objectives for his class Power and “Development,” which he teaches at Harris. Finally, we explore Professor Sanchez de la Sierra’s perspectives on the state of the world at-large, including his insights into the #FreeCongo movement. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Raphael Rony Anthony, Manda Bwerevu, and Hannah Balikci Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 1 h 11 min. 8 sec.
  • Polarization in a Region of Turmoil | Daniel Brumberg

    10 APR 2024 · What factors hindered Tunisia's democratic transition after the Arab Spring? In this episode, we speak with Professor Daniel Brumberg, a Professor in the Department of Government at Georgetown University and co-founder of its Democracy and Governance Master’s program. We discuss Tunisia’s political landscape and how polarization impacted its own democratic journey. We also discuss different theories of political transition, Middle Eastern development politics, and Dr. Brumberg’s perspectives on Iran. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Joshilyn Binkley and Hannah Balikci Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 59 min. 30 sec.
  • Colonizing Kashmir | Hafsa Kanjwal

    8 MAR 2024 · https://www.lse.ac.uk/sociology/human-rights/events/events-2023/colonizing-kashmir/Colonizing-Kashmir-State-building-under-Indian-Occupation. The book interrogates how Kashmir was made "integral" to India through a study of the decade long rule of Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad, the second Prime Minister of the State of Jammu and Kashmir. We discuss the historical context of the conflict in Kashmir through the book’s chapters. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Nishita Karun and Julia Higgins Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 40 min. 52 sec.
  • Philosophies of Research | Austin Wright

    9 FEB 2024 · What kind of ethical concerns should researchers think about when deciding to take on a project? In this episode, we speak with Professor Austin Wright, an Assistant Professor of Public Policy at The University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy and a faculty affiliate of the Pearson Institute and Empirical Studies of Conflict Project. We speak about his past and current research projects in Afghanistan, dual-use infrastructure, and broad U.S. policy interventions. We also talk about his work teaching as a professor, his advice for students, and how his life journey has influenced his understanding of conflict and ripple effects. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Jose Macias and Hannah Balikci Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 1 h 33 min. 11 sec.
  • Gendered Dimensions of Conflict | Maliha Chishti

    10 GEN 2024 · How do war and conflict give rise to gender-based violence? In this episode, we speak with Dr. Maliha Chishti, an assistant instructional professor at the Divinity School and an associate of The Pearson Institute. Her core research interests are international peacebuilding, security, and development, as well as gender and human rights in post-conflict contexts. We talk about gender-based violence in the context of war, Dr. Chishti’s work in passing Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace, and Security, and the complexities of humanitarian aid implementation today. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Julia Higgins, Rabail Sofi, and Hannah Balikci Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 55 min. 24 sec.
  • Mothers and Peacebuilding | Amal Hamada

    7 DIC 2023 · What is the role of mothers in counterterrorism efforts? Within conflict, women have traditionally been viewed as victims that need protecting; however, their involvement is much more nuanced than that. In this episode, we speak with Professor Amal Hamada, a professor of political science and gender studies at Cairo University. We talk about the role of gender when discussing conflict, the women’s movement in Iran, and Palestinian mothers today. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Jordan Enos, Raphael Rony Antony, and Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 43 min. 54 sec.
  • After Authoritarianism | Monika Nalepa

    3 NOV 2023 · How are authoritarian elites and their collaborators handled in the aftermath of democratic transitions? The modern discipline of documenting transitional justice began with the Nuremberg trials for Nazi perpetrators. The trials shifted the way the international community thinks about accountability for human rights violations committed by authoritarian regimes and are generally the most well-known example of transitional justice. Yet, there exist different procedures of extra-judicial transitional justice—including lustration, truth commissions, and purges—that hold human rights violators accountable and remove them from positions of power without formally sentencing them. In this episode, we speak with Professor Monika Nalepa, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, about her new book After Authoritarianism and her monumental work building the https://ipekcinar.shinyapps.io/global_transitional_justice_dataset/ at the http://www.tjdemstabilitylab.com/. We talk about the different implications of transitional justice for both leaders and rank-and-file members of authoritarian regimes and the more recent global phenomenon of democratic backsliding. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/after-authoritarianism/588E19D4A35B32956CFDDD2DA06C9C9D. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Hannah Balikci
    Ascoltato 36 min. 45 sec.
  • Kurdish Women and Resistance | Rez Gardi

    5 OTT 2023 · What role did Kurdish women play in Iran's protests last year? The death of Jina Mahsa Amini at the hands of Iranian authorities sparked mass demonstrations for women’s rights under the rallying cry of "Women, Life, Freedom." But the Kurdish minorities behind this resistance have largely been erased—and their movements co-opted before the international community. In this episode, we speak with Rez Gardi, a Kurdish New Zealander lawyer and human rights activist, about how, despite becoming the symbol of a revolution, non-Kurdish activists and news coverage have continually denied Jina her true name and identity. We talk about the long-lived Kurdish resistance against state oppression in Iran, Syria, and Turkey and the broader history of the Kurdish struggle for autonomy and self-determination in the Middle East. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Hannah Balikci and Zareen Hussain Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Reema Saleh
    Ascoltato 59 min. 50 sec.
  • Lives Amid Violence | Mareike Schomerus

    7 SET 2023 · What mental models underpin international development? And how do they hold back actors working in conflict-affected countries? In this episode, we speak with https://harris.uchicago.edu/directory/mareike-schomerus-0, author of Lives Amid Violence and Vice President of https://busaracenter.org/, one of the first behavioral science research labs in the Global South. Drawing from ten years of research by the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium, she argues that the international development sector, in its current form, often fails to take into account the experiences and perspectives of people living in contexts of violence and conflict and offers a new language for transforming development in the wake of conflict. We talk about the colonialist thinking underpins international development, how the sector's unflinching faith in causality creates blind spots for practitioners, and what it means to envision this space anew. https://transformingdevelopment.org/. This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at https://thepearsoninstitute.org/ https://thepearsoninstitute.org/news-and-media/podcast. Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Julia Higgins, Reema Saleh, and Umama Zillur Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Reema Saleh
    Ascoltato 57 min. 34 sec.

Why are some places affected by violence and disorder while others enjoy peace and stability? From the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts, “Root of Conflict” analyzes violent conflict around...

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Why are some places affected by violence and disorder while others enjoy peace and stability? From the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts, “Root of Conflict” analyzes violent conflict around the world, and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. We meet with leading experts to discuss what can be done to create more peaceful societies.

This series is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts at the Harris School of Public Policy. We're produced and hosted by Hannah Balikci and edited by Nishita Karun.

Learn more about Root of Conflict here.
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