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The GEST Podcast

30 Episodes

28 minutes | Dec 9, 2021
Pandemic Inequalities: Violence against Women during COVID19
Today’s episode is looking at epistemologies in pandemic inequalities and applying feminist consciousness to address violence against women during global pandemic. We close this year’s 16 days of activism campaign against gender-based violence by asking the question: Where are the feminists? And we point to the gaps in pandemic response from a public health and feminist perspective. Kalevera Imungu is a Kenyan Feminist, Gender and Diversity Specialist and Consultant. She has experience in feminist advocacy, programming and policy analysis in the areas of economic justice, women’s leadership and a host of others. When she is not smashing the patriarchy in her work, she is a struggling plan mom. Zainab Chisenga is a gender and women’s rights specialist and consultant from Malawi. Her areas of expertise are in women’s political and civic participation, economic justice, movement building, positive masculinities and gender-based violence thematic areas. Outside her activism, she enjoys books and serene spaces. Jessy Gondwe is health practitioner and gender advocate from Malawi. She has experience in health research, front line health care delivery, sexual and reproductive health and gender programming in Southern and Eastern Africa. She is passionate in applying gender lens in addressing health problems and health systems strengthening. Aside her work, she enjoys hanging out with friends and family.
32 minutes | Sep 17, 2021
Myriam Sfeir from the Arab Institute for Women
Myriam Sfeir Murad is joining us from Lebanon via the ERASMUS staff exchange program. Myriam joined the Arab Institute for Women (AiW) in 1996 and is currently the institute's Director. Previously she served as senior managing editor of Al-Raida, the double-blind peer-reviewed journal published by AiW. On this episode we talk about AiW and their work in Lebanon and the Arab Region more broadly.
34 minutes | Mar 19, 2021
Moxie: A Feminist Movie Review feat. Nikkita Hamar Patterson
The new Netflix original movie Moxie is about a shy 16-year-old girl, who is inspired by her mum's rebellious past and a confident new friend to publish an anonymous zine calling out sexism at her school. So what is this movie? An honest attempt at making feminism edible for the masses or just another example of white women being pushed to foreground of the feminist movement? We talked to Nikkita Hamar Patterson, lecturer in film studies at the University of Iceland, and our resident senior researcher Giti Chandra to find out.
24 minutes | Mar 8, 2021
March 8 Special: Happy International Women's Day
This episode is dedicated to the tireless work of the GEST alumni. We present current projects that former GEST fellows are currently involved in, and we speak to the recipient of the GEST Alumni Fund grant 2020 Chinenye Anekwe, who explains how and why she became involved in the field of gender and energy.
35 minutes | Mar 5, 2021
Islah Jad on Palestinian Women's Activism: Nationalism, Secularism, Islamism
Dr Islah Jad is Associate Professor in Gender, Development and Cultural Studies at Birzeit University where she began teaching in 1984. She is a founding member of the Women’s Studies Institute at Birzeit University and its MA programme. We speak to her about her latest book 'Palestinian Women's Activism: Nationalism, Secularism, Islamism' in which Jad explores the women's movement in Palestine against the backdrop of a historical and political landscape marked by internal tensions and contradictions, as well as an all-encompassing Israeli occupation.
30 minutes | Feb 26, 2021
Linda Gusia on Gender, Memory and Reconciliation in Kosovo
In our third installment of our ERASMUS+ series, we speak to Linda Gusia, who is a feminist activist and lecturer at the department of Sociology at the University of Prishtina in Kosovo. Her research has focused on topics of gender, nationalism, activism, representation, public space, memory and violence. As part of her PhD thesis she interrogated ambiguities of nationalism and gender by looking both at the women's movement in Kosovo and sexual violence as a strategy of war, centering on the politics of gender representation visually and textually. She holds a PhD from University of Prishtina (2016) and MA from NYU (2003). Linda was co-curator and researcher in the multimedia art exhibition on women’s peaceful resistance in Kosovo. She co-founded the University Program for Gender Studies and Research, UP. She was visiting research scholar and fellow at the Gender Research Institute, Dartmouth College, and fellow for five years of the Academic Fellowship Program OSI. She is currently a PI of the Changing the Story Phase 2 ECR project: The Making of the Museum of Education: Memory, violence and resistance as seen by artists, youth and institutions. Linda is the Principal Investigator of the Phase 2 Kosovo project The Making of the Museum of Education and Co-Investigator of the Phase 2 Large Grant Project ‘ReSpace.’
37 minutes | Feb 19, 2021
Myriam Sfeir from the Lebanese American University
Myriam Sfeir is the director of the Arab Institute for Women (AiW) at the Lebanese American University in Beirut. Previously she served as senior managing editor of Al-Raida, the double-blind peer-reviewed journal published by AiW. She has over twenty five years of experience working in the area of women’s rights and gender equality and ample experience doing research, expert analysis, trainings, and teaching. She is an authority on the women’s movement in Lebanon and has worked extensively on several groundbreaking projects related to oral history, movement building, marginalized groups and has organized several international and regional conferences, film festivals, and panels that address gender rights and justice. She earned her Bachelor degree in Philosophy from the American University of Beirut and her Master’s degree in Interdisciplinary Women’s Studies from the University of Warwick, United Kingdom.
32 minutes | Feb 5, 2021
Tonya Haynes from the University of the West Indies
In the first of a series of podcasts in which we engage in conversation with some of the brightest minds in gender and diversity studies from our ERASMUS+ partner universities, we speak to Tonya Haynes, lecturer and interim Head and Coordinator of Graduate Programmes at the Institute for Gender and Development Studies, Nita Barrow Unit, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus in Barbados. Her projects and research is animated around the liberatory potential of Carribbean feminist thought, and her institute is involved in a range of projects that not only address gender issues, but are part of a much larger movement that ties in with the decolonization of the west indies.
35 minutes | Dec 4, 2020
#MeToo Special: Marai Larasi
Marai Larasi is one of the contributors to the 'Routledge Handbook of the Politics of MeToo Movement'. She is an advocate, community organiser, consultant, and educator, whose work deliberately centres the journeys, narratives, knowledge and expertise of Black / Global Majority women and girls. For over 25 years, her social justice practice and activism has focused primarily on ending violence against women and girls. Today we talk to her about the tension between the poetic flow of activist expression and the linearity of academic writing, plantation feminism (a term she coins in the book), and the importance of getting comfortable with discomfort when we’re trying to build solidarity with one another. Photo credit: Michelle Beatty
23 minutes | Nov 27, 2020
#MeToo Special: Thelma Kaliu (Malawi)
To celebrate the coming publication of The Routledge Handbook of the Politics of the #MeToo movement, we speak to a series of activists from around the world about what the #MeToo movement looks like in different national contexts. On this episode we speak to former GEST fellow Thelma Kaliu from Malawi. Thelma is a practitioner in gender, education, child protection, youth empowerment, and development. She has worked for a number of prolific organisations, including UN Women and Girls Empowerment Network. Today she is a project coordinator at Plan International.
32 minutes | Nov 20, 2020
#MeToo Special: Masha Durkalić (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
A former fellow of the GEST Programme, Masha Durkalić is a researcher, editor and one of the authors of the book #WomenOfBiH. She graduated in journalism from the Faculty of Political Science at the University of Sarajevo and started working as a journalist in 2008, focusing on women’s and LGBTQI rights. She obtained her MA degree within the European Regional Master in Democracy and Human Rights (ERMA) programme. She lives and works in Sarajevo where she works in communications and public relations and researches social movements focusing on feminist activism in southeast Europe.
40 minutes | Nov 13, 2020
#MeToo Special: Kinita Shenoy (Sri Lanka)
To celebrate the coming publication of The Routledge Handbook of the Politics of the #MeToo movement, we speak to a series of activists from around the world about what the #MeToo movement looks like in different national contexts. On this episode we speak to Kinita Shenoy. She is a writer and communications specialist who has worked with the UN, the European Climate Foundation, and the World Bank Group. She has served as the Editor-in-Chief of Cosmopolitan Sri Lanka and Yamu, and her work has been published globally, including on Condé Nast Traveler and Harper's Bazaar. Her focus is on fostering equitable communities via campaigns and communications on gender and women's rights.
20 minutes | Nov 9, 2020
Suhaila Mubariz Qaderi: Gender and the Kabul University Attacks
On this episode we speak to assistant professor Suhaila Mubariz Qaderi about the Kabul University bombings and how they tie in with gender roles in Afghanistan and the disciplining measures of a patriarchal society.
30 minutes | Nov 6, 2020
#MeToo Special: Bisharo Ali Hussein (Somalia)
To celebrate the publication of the 'Routledge Handbook of the #MeToo Movement' we will spend the next 5 weeks speaking to activists from around the world about how the #MeToo movement takes shape in different contexts. This week we speak to Bisharo Ali Hussein from Somalia. Bisharo is pursuing her Masters of Public Policy in Barcelona and MBA program in the UK. Bisharo is a humanitarian and a development and gender expert. She is an activist who is passionate about gender equality, peace and security, human rights and fights specifically for youths and women rights and sexual reproductive health rights
45 minutes | Aug 28, 2020
Pontus Järvstad on Gender, Fascism and Colonialism
Pontus Järvstad is a local activist and PhD student in History at the University of Iceland. He is also one of the most knowledgeable people in Iceland on historical issues of communism and fascism. Today Giti and I interrogate this man's towering intellect aboiut gender issues in fascist and anti-fascist movements. And of course we can't interview a Swedish historian without talking about vikings.
39 minutes | Jul 3, 2020
On Academic Colonialism and How to Take the Patriarchy Out of Your Writing
Today we speak to Randi Stebbins from the University of Iceland Writing Center about our experiences with teaching in the GEST Programme and how to bring yourself and your identity into your writing.
43 minutes | Jun 29, 2020
Can We Separate Art From the Artist? The Definitive Answer
What do we do when our favorite artists, authors and film makers get called out for problematic or even violent and abuse behavior? Today Giti and Thomas are joined by extreme film expert Nikkita Hamar Patterson, and together we attempt to provide a definitive answer to the question: Can you separate art from the artist?
31 minutes | Jun 5, 2020
Intersectionality: Gender and Sexuality
This week Giti and Thomas discuss sexual harassment (hence the long faces)and the gendering of the female mentrual cycle. Good times.
31 minutes | May 29, 2020
Cultural Appropriation, Race and Gender
Take our online course: https://www.edx.org/course/gender-and-intersectionality This week Giti and Thomas discuss the phenomenon of cultural appropriation, starting with the use of Sanskrit chanting in Battlestar Galactica. But when is something cultural appropriation? And what does it have to do with race, racism and gender?
27 minutes | May 22, 2020
Intersectionality: Gender and Class
Enroll in our online course here: https://www.edx.org/course/gender-and-intersectionality Continuing our series of discussions around our new online course 'Gender and Intersectionality, Giti and Thomas tackle issues around feminism, versus capitalism, the issue of doing 'perfect' activism, gender in the time of COVID19 and gender/class based disparities in academia.
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