Conflict Zone from the LSE – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Conflict Zone from the LSE
Conflict Zone from the LSE
Fréquence : 1 épisode/92j. Total Éps: 18

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S3 Ep3: State Collapse and the Shrinking of Civic Space under the Taliban: The Politics of Knowledge in Afghanistan
Saison 3 · Épisode 3
vendredi 3 novembre 2023 • Durée 27:21
In this episode we look at how narratives of state failure, shaped largely by Western expertise, have overlooked and undermined the progress made by Afghans in healthcare, education, and economic stabilization. We argue that the outsized nature of the international intervention in Afghanistan, alongside a top-down approach to conflict resolution, has contributed to a misrepresentation of on-the-ground realities.
Featuring Marika Theros and Sahar Halaimzai, both policy fellows at the LSE Conflict and Civicness Research Group (CCRG) and the co-directors of the Peacerep’s Afghanistan Research Network. Marika and Sahar in 2021 worked together on the creation and realization of the ‘trilateral 1.5 track dialogue’ at the Atlantic Council, bringing together US, European and Afghan stakeholders to develop an inclusive and longer-term strategic outlook on stability in Afghanistan.
S3 Ep2: From the Revolution of Dignity to Full-Scale War: Civic Resistance in Ukraine
Saison 3 · Épisode 2
vendredi 6 octobre 2023 • Durée 31:42
In this episode, we break down the origins of Ukrainian civicness from the start of the Revolution of Dignity that ousted the pro-Kremlin President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014. We look at different roles adopted by a broad set of actors within the society since, following nationwide reforms and the pressures of Russia’s conventional and hybrid warfare. We argue that Putin’s strategy may well be to transform the war in Ukraine into a protracted and long-running conflict resembling the ‘new wars’ of modern time.
Featuring Mary Kaldor, Professor Emeritus of Global Governance and Director of the Conflict Research Group (CRD) at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and Oksana Potapova, a Ukrainian peacebuilding research and activist pursuing a PhD at the Department of Gender Studies at LSE.
S1 Ep4: Opportunities for peace and democracy: civicness in conflict societies
Saison 1 · Épisode 4
vendredi 11 septembre 2020 • Durée 58:32
The belief that ‘nothing good’ occurs in conflict regions is typical of a Western-centric bias and a rather 'top down' model of intervention.
In this podcast we challenge this way of thinking. And we do so by talking about an empirical phenomena we find in conflict ravaged societies - a phenomenon we call civic-ness. We argue that this simple idea can unleash democratic change - and what’s more, it’s an empirical, not an idealistic concept. It’s something we find in all the societies that we investigate on the Conflict Research Programme. This podcast explores these ideas with reference to Iraq and Syria, looking at movements for gender equality, independent journalism and democratic transformation.
Featuring Matthew Benson, director of the LSE South Sudan Programme, Henry Radice, Research Fellow in the Conflict and Civil Society Research Unit, Rim Turkmani, Research Director of the LSE Syrian Research Programme, Zahra Ali, assistant professor at Rutgers University, Newark, and Aida Al-Kaisy, a media reform advisor and the author of the LSE Conflict Research Programme report, A Fragmented Landscape: Barriers to Independent Media in Iraq.
This podcast series has been funded by the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office as part of the Conflict Research Programme.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Ben Higgins Millner
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
S1 Ep3: Identity politics and the political marketplace
Saison 1 · Épisode 3
mercredi 12 août 2020 • Durée 54:52
To overcome this, the Conflict Research Programme investigates the holistic relationship between different, interconnected logics: a political marketplace condition where politics becomes a question of buying and selling support, and the role of exclusivist identity politics as a means to legitimacy for armed groups. The intersection of these elements is fuelled and sustained by violent conflict.
In this podcast, we investigate the relationship between political marketplace conditions and organised violence in Iraq and Syria. We also review the political history of post-1991 Ethiopia and ask if it's undergoing a transformation from a developmental state to a political marketplace one. And we consider what the necessary ingredients are to move beyond these violent logics of conflict.
Featuring professor Alex de Waal (Tufts University and LSE), Mulugeta Berhe, former Ethiopian freedom fighter and research fellow at Tufts University, Rim Turkmani, the director of the Syria Research Programme, LSE, and Jessica Watkins, researcher at the Middle East Centre, LSE.
This podcast series has been funded by the UK Department of International Development as part of the Conflict Research Programme.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Ben Higgins Millner
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
S1 Ep2: Buying and selling politics: the political marketplace and its adversaries
Saison 1 · Épisode 2
mercredi 29 juillet 2020 • Durée 48:35
In this podcast, we introduce the idea of the political marketplace as a way of understanding the relationship between politics and organised violence in twenty-first century conflicts. This is a term which we use on the Conflict Research Programme to discuss the nature of the challenge facing democratic politics in societies prone to violence. We show the contrast between this idea and its opposite: the developmental state. We use Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan as examples of political marketplace societies. And we conclude by analysing the possibilities for a break with marketplace politics: the overthrow of Al-Bashir in Sudan.
Featuring professor Alex de Waal (Tufts University, LSE and the World Peace Foundation), Aditya Sarkar, a researcher at Tufts University and the World Peace Foundation, and Raga Makawi, a Sudanese civil society activist.
This podcast series has been funded by the UK Department of International Development as part of the Conflict Research Programme.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Ben Higgins Millner
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
S1 Ep1: How is war changing? Organised violence in the 21st century
Saison 1 · Épisode 1
mercredi 22 juillet 2020 • Durée 51:09
Modern warfare has become more like a social condition, an intractable conflict situation. In this podcast we show how this is happening in the countries we’ve looked at on the Conflict Research Programme. And we take a closer look at the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo. We pick apart the reputation the country has as a site of so-called ‘resource wars’. We show that it’s a lot more complicated than this part of the academic literature has suggested.
Featuring professor Mary Kaldor, director of the Conflict Research Programme at the LSE, Zaki Mehchy, a researcher on the Syria team at the LSE, and professor Koen Vlassenroot, director of the Conflict Research Group at Ghent University.
This podcast series has been funded by the UK Department of International Development as part of the Conflict Research Programme.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Ben Higgins Millner
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
S3 Ep1: Where are Our Mangoes? Local-driven Contestation of Predatory Practices in South Sudan’s Resource Extraction
Saison 3 · Épisode 1
vendredi 22 septembre 2023 • Durée 31:16
In this episode we look at how the lack of equitable distribution of revenue has persisted. Using latest research, we observe a locally driven understanding of resource extraction and management practices among the wider South Sudanese community that learns from the country and region’s history of inequitable patterns of rule.
What does this mean for South Sudan in the context of global decarbonization and scramble for scarce resources? Find out in this debut episode featuring Dr. Matthew Benson, the Sudans Research Director at LSE CCRG and Rose Mabu, a researcher within the South Sudan-based Bridge Network of South Sudanese researchers.
S2 Ep5: The logics of conflict in the DRC: from the mineral to the checkpoint economy
Saison 2 · Épisode 5
mardi 4 mai 2021 • Durée 49:06
In this episode, we explore the changing nature of the political economy of violence in the DRC. We outline the connections between local and global factors in fuelling the 'mineral wars'. But we also explore the new phenomenon of rebel financing: the role of checkpoints, showing how this also elicits linkages between globalisation and local political economies. We argue checkpoints provide an important window into governance practices in the DRC - and a greater awareness of this aspect, and its nuances, can help generate policy-making that is receptive to local conditions.
Featuring, Lys Kulamadayil, a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Amsterdam, Peer Schouten, a Senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies, Godefroid Muzalia Kihangu, professor at the department of History and Social Science at the Higher Education Institute of Bukavu, and Bienvenu Mukungilwa, a research assistant with the CERUKI at the Higher Education Institute of Bukavu.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Camilo Tirado
Translation and production support: Henry Radice, LSE, Kasper Hoffman, Ghent University
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
This podcast series has been funded by the UK government’s Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) as part of the LSE Conflict Research Programme. The ideas expressed in the podcast do not necessarily reflect the views or policy positions of the UK Government/FCDO.
S2 Ep4: Decolonising conflict research in the Global South: reflections and dialogues
Saison 2 · Épisode 4
lundi 29 mars 2021 • Durée 34:49
In this episode, we introduce the Silent Voices Bukavu Project, a collaborative research project, based on the sharing of experiences and creation of dialogue, which has created an intellectual and cultural resource for the global academy. The project seeks to identify and share problems in order to promote and encourage collaborative best practices.
Featuring professor Koen Vlassenroot, Director of the Conflict Research Group at Ghent University, Emery Mudinga, the Director of Angaza Institute and Associate Professor at Higher Institute for Rural Development, Bukavu, and Irène Bahati, a Congolese researcher at the Study Group on Conflict and Human Security and Teacher at the Higher Pedagogical Institute of Bukavu.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Camilo Tirado
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
This podcast series has been funded by the UK government’s Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) as part of the LSE Conflict Research Programme. The ideas expressed in the podcast do not necessarily reflect the views or policy positions of the UK Government/FCDO.
S2 Ep3: What happens when the oil runs out? Traumatic decarbonisation in South Sudan
Saison 2 · Épisode 3
mercredi 17 mars 2021 • Durée 41:17
But what happens if decarbonisation is forced on a state? In this podcast, we explore the 'peak oil' problem in South Sudan. As the country's reserves dwindle, and oil prices collapse, the extremely impoverished, oil dependent economy has faced a mounting and existential crisis. This is what the Conflict Research Programme calls, 'traumatic decarbonisation'. And it's been a central factor in the South Sudanese Civil War. Drawing on expert interviews and archive footage, Conflict Zone investigates this process and asks what can be done to address the on-going crisis.
Featuring Matthew Benson, director of the South Sudan team on the Conflict Research Programme, and Joshua Craze, a researcher with Tufts University who has been investigating the 'peak oil' crisis.
Producers: Luke Cooper, Azaria Morgan
Sound editor: Camilo Tirado
Intro music: The Drama by Rafael Krux (used for education purposes under Creative Commons License).
This podcast series has been funded by the UK government’s Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) as part of the LSE Conflict Research Programme. The ideas expressed in the podcast do not necessarily reflect the views or policy positions of the UK Government/FCDO.




