In the media ODID academics are frequently called on by the media for comment and analysis on topical issues, drawing on their specialist knowledge to bring depth and objectivity to current debates Breadcrumb Home Research In the media The Telegraph Why the wars on terror, drugs and migration may never succeed Ruben Andersson MORE The Conversation Victims of the green energy boom? Nikita Sud MORE Border Criminologies Blog 'What our Waters Remember: On Wasted Bodies as Strange Fish' Helidah Ogude-Chambert MORE The Conversation 'The family home in South African townships is contested – why occupation, inheritance and history are clashing with laws' Maxim Bolt MORE Deutsche Welle ‘Do protests by Africans in the diaspora make a difference?’ Loren Landau MORE The Jakarta Post ‘Indonesia can take full benefit of resource nationalism’ Fandi Achmad MORE CNN ‘Leaders “burying their heads in the sand” on new drivers of displacement’ Alexander Betts MORE Global Partnership blog ‘Climate resilient development needs effective cooperation’ Albert Sanghoon Park MORE The Conversation ‘Fifty years after the Uruguay coup, why so few people have been brought to justice for dictatorship crimes’ MORE World Politics Review ‘Instead of resettlement schemes, make migration easier’ Matthew J Gibney MORE BBC Radio ‘On oral history and the liberation movement in Zimbabwe’ Jocelyn Alexander MORE The Word ‘South Africa plans to deport thousands back to Zimbabwe’ Loren Landau MORE Previous page ‹ Previous Page 1 Current page 2 Page 3 … Next page Next ›
Border Criminologies Blog 'What our Waters Remember: On Wasted Bodies as Strange Fish' Helidah Ogude-Chambert MORE
The Conversation 'The family home in South African townships is contested – why occupation, inheritance and history are clashing with laws' Maxim Bolt MORE
Global Partnership blog ‘Climate resilient development needs effective cooperation’ Albert Sanghoon Park MORE
The Conversation ‘Fifty years after the Uruguay coup, why so few people have been brought to justice for dictatorship crimes’ MORE