Citizen Reporter

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 108:34:11
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Sinopsis

The podcast that listens to people around the world.

Episodios

  • Pauline Bax: A Tale of Two Presidents, Ivory Coast

    31/03/2011 Duración: 28min

    Citizenreporter.org's West Africa correspondant isn't too keen on walking the streets of Abidjan these days and she has to watch what she says, as the country is sharply divided by a political standoff. The standoff is between two presidents and their supporters. One the incumbent with his own dedicated citizenry, the other elected several months ago, internationally certified and recognized. How long can this standoff last? What can be done or is being done to resolve it? In the meantime, what does daily life consist of on the streets of Abidjan as well as for a longtime correspondant in her own neighborhood. Joining me online from Abidjan, international journalist and prolific West Africa blogger, Pauline Bax. Her work on bloomberg.com Her blog West Africa Wins Always

  • Natasha Ezrow: Dissecting Dictators

    26/03/2011 Duración: 21min

    2011 is the year where many observers and so called experts around the world scramble to understand how it is that so many dictatorships suddenly arrived at a crisis. As people take to the streets and battles take place in city squares throughout the middle east, we discover that in fact many of the dictators of these regions have not been well studied or understood. Natasha Ezrow, Director of the International Development Studies Program at the University of Essex and author of Dictators & Dictatorships: Understanding Authoritarian Regimes and Their Leaders, has written about the important differences between dictators which we now see being played out by how they handle calls for reform.  She also lays out criteria for why types of leaders might flee a country before anyone is harmed, while others would stay til their last breath.

  • Matthew Dons in Japan: The Survival Plan

    16/03/2011 Duración: 46min

    You may think the media and the social networks have told you all that needs to be known about conditions on the ground in Japan, but hearing it first hand gives you a far greater understanding.  In the days following the massive earthquake and tsunami, Karamoon contacted me from his home in Tokyo. He wasn't sure how much longer he could remain in his home, or on the other hand, if he wouldn't have to stay in doors for two weeks to avoid radioactive winds. In the following podcast he describes his experience and the concerns going forward.  He also goes into details about his survival preparations and options on an island where many people face difficult choices in the aftermath. Follow Karamoon on twitter Listen to the Learn Japanese Pod And just now I received an update, Tokyo Hacker Space is taking action for quake relief in Northern Japan but they need your help. (link has been down occasionally today)

  • Restoring and Reconnecting: The Legacy of Sousa Mendes

    15/11/2010 Duración: 30min

    Gerald Mendes was born in Canada and raised with the story of his grandfather Aristides de Sousa Mendes. As he grew up he came to learn not only about the history of his family, but also about those that the actions of his grandfather during WWII helped to save. At a restaurant in Paris we sat down recently to talk about his family, his life experiences, and his activities related to the legacy of his grandfather.

  • Sousa Mendes: Defying Orders to Save Lives

    07/11/2010 Duración: 46min

    He died disgraced and impoverished, asking his children to one day clear his name. Decades later, the story of how that man, Aristides de Sousa Mendes, helped save thousands upon thousands of lives during World War II, is finally spreading around the world. Today his family and descendants of those that were saved by his actions are working to restore not only his name, legacy, and to ensure that his story lives on. My guest on this podcast is one of the founders of the Sousa Mendes Foundation, herself the daughter and grand daughter of Sousa Mendes visa recipients: Olivia Mattis. In this conversation she tells the story of Sousa Mendes, what becam

  • Newark Night Patrol W/Cory Booker

    08/12/2009 Duración: 54min

    The story is not unique to Newark, all over the United States there are cities that are struggling. But what is unique is how citizens of Newark respond. Led by Newark Mayor Cory Booker, a man who loves his gadgets and social networking, groups of volunteers from all walks of life ride the streets of the city in packs of caravans, looking around to see what is going on, who needs help, and what doesn't look right.  In cooperation with the police and department of public safety, the objective is to stem the violence, reduce crime, and show residents that people do care.  As the mayor himself said to me, it is also a chance for people from different backgrounds, races, religion, geographic locations, you name it - to meet each other and engage in this community activity together. In this podcast I take you along on a night patrol with pack #2. Along the way you'll hear stories, some serious, some not so serious, but each from a different volunteer with a unique connection to the city of Newark.  You will also

  • Thomas Milo on Arabic Script, War in Lebanon, and More

    29/09/2008 Duración: 55min

    Linguist and citizen of the world Thomas Milo of Decotype joins me to discuss arabic script, working as a translator for UNIFIL, and mind blowing stories from his days as an intercontinental trucker.

  • Thomas Milo on UNIFIL

    24/05/2007 Duración: 45min

    The name UNIFIL doesn't often appear on page one of the mainstream newspapers. For many it was last summers invasion of southern Lebanon that caused the media to even mention that there was an international force wedged between Israel, Lebanon, Hezbollah, given the task of ensuring that all sides respect a peace agreement.Thomas Milo had a very unique roll as one of the only Arabic speakers stationed with the Dutch battalion of UNIFIL back in 1979. We sat together in his kitchen in Amsterdam and he explained what it was like to work everyday between rocks and a hard place.

  • bm184 Bangladesh, A Welcome Emergency

    11/02/2007

    bm184 Bangladesh, A Welcome Emergency

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