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Expulsion as Statecraft: Histories of Violence from the Asian Expulsion of 1972 to the Banyarwanda Crisis of 1982

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Alicia Decker (Penn State) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality
Between October 2 and December 31, 1982, nearly 80,000 Banyarwanda – most of whom were citizens of Uganda – were violently expelled from their homes by state operatives in Mbarara and
Bushenyi Districts. Approximately half fled to neighboring Rwanda, while the rest crowded into existing refugee settlements in the southwest or found themselves stranded on the Ugandan side of the border at Merema Hill. Unlike the Asian expulsion of 1972, the Banyarwanda were not given ninety days to prepare. Instead, they were attacked in their homes and forced to flee without a
moment’s notice. Most of the displaced lost everything they owned – their homes, their valuables, and their cattle. International observers also reported multiple instances of rape and suicide. I do not wish to suggest that the Asian expulsion was any less violent or traumatic. On the contrary, I argue that it provided a dangerous template that was later used by those in power to justify and carry out the next brutal eviction. Indeed, as this presentation reveals, expulsion functioned as a militarized form of statecraft that bolstered, and then later undermined, the integrity of the
postcolonial state.
Alicia C. Decker is an associate professor and department head of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the Pennsylvania State University, with courtesy appointments in the African Studies Program and the Department of History. She also co-directs the African Feminist Initiative with Gabeba Baderoon and Maha Marouan. She is the author of In Idi Amin’s Shadow: Women, Gender, and Militarism in Uganda (Ohio UP, 2014), and co-author with Andrea L. Arrington-Sirois of Africanizing Democracies: 1980-Present (Oxford UP, 2015). She is the co-editor of “African
Feminisms: Cartographies for the 21st Century,” a special issue of Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism (2018) and “African Feminist Subjectivities,” a special issue of Feminist Formations(forthcoming 2024). With Giacomo Macola, she co-edits a book series on War and Militarism in African History (Ohio University Press) and serves on the editorial board of the Journal of African Military History. Her scholarly articles have appeared in the International Journal of African Historical Studies, Women’s History Review, Journal of Eastern African Studies, History Teacher, Afriche e Orienti, Feminist Studies, Journal of African Military History, and Meridians, as well as various edited book collections. Decker is currenting working on a new book that explores the gendered legacies of militarism in Uganda after the collapse of Amin’s military state.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Alicia Decker
Keywords
Uganda
expulsion
refugees
South Asia
india
banyarwanda
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:20:52

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Digital News Report 2022. Episode 3: How people access climate change news

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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In this episode of our podcast we look at findings from our DNR22 on how people access news about climate change.
In this special episode of our Future of Journalism podcast we are looking into the findings of the Digital News Report 2022 around how people access climate change news. We will look at what news sources people pay most attention to, how interest differs around the world and why, and what news organisations could do to more closely engage audiences with climate change news.

Craig T. Robertson is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. His research focus includes news trust and credibility, fact-checking and verification, and how both partisan attitudes and epistemic beliefs factor into these domains. He is the author of the Digital News Report 2022 chapter on how people get climate change news.

Our host Federica Cherubini is Head of Leadership Development at the Reuters Institute. She is an expert in newsroom operations and organisational change, with more than ten years of experience spanning major publishers, research institutes and editorial networks around the world.

Find a transcript of the episode at: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/news/our-podcast-digital-news-report-2022-episode-3-how-people-access-climate-change-news
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Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Craig T. Robertson
Keywords
climate change
journalism
news
media
digital news report
reuters institute
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:21:55

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Insecurities of Expulsion: Race, Violence, Citizenship and Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transregional Uganda

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Anneeth Kaur Hundle (UC Irvine) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality
In this short talk, I offer a synopsis of my forthcoming book and its core interventions. Namely, I recenter contemporary Uganda within scholarly discussion on the 1972 Asian expulsion. I assess the exceptional ways in which the 1972 Asian expulsion is understood within global knowledge formations, arguing that expulsion is a “critical event” with lingering effects and affects in territorial
Uganda and its diasporas, which I situate as the “insecurities of expulsion." Despite the historic expulsion of Ugandan Asians, South Asian-ness continues to define the very constitution of the
Ugandan nation and the normative construction of (racially nativist) Ugandan national identity. Ugandan postcolonial governments have shifted from policies and practices of Asian racial expulsion to maintaining racial exclusion while incorporating Ugandan Asian returnees and South Asian subjects as racial non-citizens and economic subjects. I utilize the post-liberal democratic analytic of “non-citizenship” to explore gradations in substantive privileges, rights and entitlements and exclusions across Ugandan Asian returnee and new South Asian migrant communities across old and new imperial and sub-imperial formations, orienting us to the study of Afro-Asian entanglements and the broader decolonization of political community in both national and transregional scope. Ultimately, I am proposing an “anthropology of Afro-Asian entanglements”-an arena of study that is concerned with the ways in which indigenous Africans and South Asians are bound together in relations of interdependency, hierarchy, intimacy and estrangement both within territorial Uganda and its transregional geographies across the Indian Ocean and North Atlantic.
Anneeth Kaur Hundle is assistant professor of anthropology and Dhan Kaur Sahota Presidential Chair of Sikh Studies in the Department of Anthropology at University of California, Irvine (UCI). Prior to UCI, she was Visiting Professor at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at UC Merced, and Research Associate at the Makerere Institute of Social Research (MISR) at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda. She is completing a book manuscript entitled, Insecurities of Expulsion: Race, Violence, Citizenship and Afro-Asian Relationalities in Transregional Uganda and beginning work on two new projects on Sikh feminisms and the intersections of Sikh Studies and university studies. She is also involved in new research clusters on Global Africa/Global Blackness, Interrogating South Asia/diasporas and Decolonizing Universities in Global Perspective with her colleagues at UCI.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Anneeth Kaur Hundle
Keywords
Uganda
india
South Asia
refugees
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:21:06

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Don't call yourselves Asian! Uganda's Indians and the problem of naming

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Taushif Kara (Cambridge) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality
The partition of the subcontinent in 1947 presented a unique problem for its diaspora. Trading communities in places like Gwadar often found themselves forced to choose between Indian and
Pakistani citizenship but desiring neither, while in colonial Tanganyika many sought British nationality. But attached to the persistent problem of nationality there was also the question of
naming, as the once porous category of Indian was now linked to a specific post-colonial state. These communities were often described for the first time as “Asian” as a way to elide this problem. This paper explores the unique genealogy and debates over this novel term amongst the communities in Uganda who considered it for themselves. I focus, however, on the groups that ultimately rejected it and instead decided to claim the name “African” instead, showing that it was at precisely this
moment that they were expelled.
Taushif Kara is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Centre of Islamic Studies and Jesus College, Cambridge. He obtained his PhD from the Faculty of History at Cambridge in 2021 with a thesis on the Khoja diaspora around the Indian Ocean world. Kara previously studied Islamic history and philosophy at the Institute of Ismaili Studies in London and served as a Teaching Fellow in the Department of Religions and Philosophies at SOAS.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Taushif Kara
Keywords
Uganda
South Asia
india
refugees
Idi admin
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:20:57

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Making Victory Visible in Idi Amin's Uganda

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Derek Peterson (Michigan) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality
This essay is about the management of economic liberation in Idi Amin’s Uganda. The Economic War transformed petty questions about the conduct of business into thrilling matters of racial liberation. There were a great many scapegoats: first the Asian community, latterly Africans who would not, or could not, follow the official rules. The punishments were draconian: economic crimes were, after 1975, punishable by death. For people in power, the Economic War was a means of making austerity, inhumanity and brutality seem essential, a crucial aspect of their heroic leadership.
Derek Peterson is Ali Mazrui Professor of History & African Studies at the University of Michigan. He’s the author, most recently, of _The Unseen Archive of Idi Amin: Photographs from the Uganda Broadcasting Corporation_ (Prestel, 2021) (with R. Vokes). Peterson is presently engaged in several curatorial projects focused on the recovery and digitization of endangered film and paper archives in Uganda. He was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2017.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Derek Peterson
Keywords
Uganda
South Asia
refugees
Idi admin
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:21:12

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Afrocentrism and the Indian Question: A Continental Reckoning with the Ugandan Expulsion

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Shobana Shanker (Stonybrook) as part of the Conference - Expulsion: Uganda’s Asians and the Remaking of Nationality
Most accounts of Idi Amin’s expulsion of Asians from Uganda in 1972 assume that African leaders and the Organization of African Unity were largely silent or unmoved to action. This interpretation assumes that Africans understood the Asian expulsion as a political problem—by contrast, I argue that Africans understood the question of Indian settlers as a fundamental problem of the postcolonial condition, connected to the very definition of African selfhood. I explore the significance of the Indian question around the African continent to the formation of intersecting
movements of anticolonialism, antiracism, nationalism, Pan-Africanism (which was a critical antidote to nationalism), and Afrocentrism. Contrary to simplistic renderings of African responses to Idi Amin’s anti-Asian racialism, African reckoning with African-Indian entanglements garnered dynamic and long-lasting African cultural responses—even where Indian settlers were few—that produced new African-Indian negotiations on the continent and among African migrants in India.

Shobana Shankar is Associate Professor of History and Africana Studies at Stony Brook University, in New York. Her research focuses on cultural encounters and politics in West Africa and Africa-India networks, especially in religion, intellectual history, health, and education. Her most recent book, An Uneasy Embrace: Africa, India and the Spectre of Race (Hurst, 2021), grew out of her meeting with Muslim Indian missionaries in Nigeria, during the course of her research for her first book Who Shall Enter Paradise? Christian Origins in Muslim Northern Nigeria, c.1890-1975 (Ohio University Press). She has also co-edited two collections of essays on religion and globalization. Her recent articles focus on Ghanaian Hinduism, reformism in Nigeria, and Senegal’s Afro-Dravidian movement.
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Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Shobana Shanker
Keywords
South Asia
Uganda
refugees
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/06/2022
Duration: 00:22:57

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Raising the Bar

Series
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
Embed
Surprising social media harms and the Online Safety Bill. This week we're talking about Claudine's research into long term harms of social media content and managing the 'mundane'.
(Content warning: Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), reference to eating disorders).

Claudine's research investigates the role of individual differences in predicting and moderating experiences of subjective harm associated with social media use. To explore that relationship, she is preparing a large-scale collection of in-situ data on emotional responses to social media use and context using a mobile experience sampling method (ESM). She also plans to conduct a series of participatory design workshops that will explore innovative ways to visualise the data collected from the ESM in a manner that provides users with meaningful insight into their social media use.

Claudine has previously worked in immigration law, post-conviction justice, and bankruptcy court. She has also volunteered as an assistant to the Papers Chairs for the Conference on Human Factors in Computing and served as a member of the editorial board for the Journal of Responsible Technology.

Outside of her research, Claudine serves as the Technology Policy advisor for We and AI, a non-profit organisation that works to increase awareness and understanding of bias in artificial intelligence amongst the general UK population.

Links for this week: Journal of Social Media in Society (https://thejsms.org/index.php/JSMS/about); New Media in Society (https://journals.sagepub.com/home/nms); Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (https://chi2022.acm.org); Wired (https://www.wired.com).

Episode Information

Series
Proving the Negative (PTNPod): Swanning About in Cyber Security
People
Arianna Schuler Scott
Claudine Tinsman
Keywords
cyber security
regulation
policy
human-computer interaction
safeguarding
security
proving the negative
ptnpod
Department: Cyber Security Centre
Date Added: 24/06/2022
Duration: 00:24:38

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Gut Instinct Ep. 5 - Transplants for alcoholic hepatitis, Single-cell in ulcerative colitis, and haemopray

Series
Gut Instinct: GI research update
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This month Fitz and Tamsin discuss outcomes from early liver transplant for alcoholic hepatitis, a single-cell study of UC plasma cells, whether haemospray really is the answer in GI bleeds, coeliac epidemiology, and more!

Episode Information

Series
Gut Instinct: GI research update
People
Michael Fitzpatrick
Tamsin Cargill
Keywords
Medicine
gastro
gastroenterology
Hepatology
alcoholic hepatitis
liver transplantation
transplantation
coeliac
celiac
functional GI disorders
DGBI
ACLF
CD
UC
ulcerative colitis
IBD
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine
Date Added: 24/06/2022
Duration: 01:39:22

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Huw Allen

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

Navigating the stresses of the media and entertainment world

Series
Future of Business
Embed
Join us as we hear from Huw Allen, a current Oxford MBA student, previous film producer…and future media tycoon!
We explore his journey through the media entertainment world – specifically around navigating the fast-paced and high-pressured lifestyle and hear from Huw about some mental health challenges that he overcame.
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Episode Information

Series
Future of Business
People
Huw Allen
Bartek Ogonowski
Keywords
media
entertainment
mental health
pressure
film producer
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 23/06/2022
Duration: 00:27:17

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