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Showing episodes and shows of
Luke De Noronha
Shows
Macrodose
Labour, Riots and Migration w/ Luke de Noronha
On this week's Macrodose, Luke de Noronha unpacks the political economy of migration and what we might expect from the new Labour government. In the context of the recent spate of far-right riots, it's more important now than ever to understand how we got to this point and to unmask the “legitimate concerns about migration” that have supposedly fuelled such racist violence. Luke de Noronha is an Associate Professor at UCL and the author of Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of Deportation to Jamaica, and the co-author of Empires Endgame: Racism and the British State and Against Borders: The C...
2024-08-07
18 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Musab Younis
Luke de Noronha welcomes Musab Younis, senior lecturer in politics and international relations at Queen Mary, University of London, and author of On the Scale of the World: The Formation of Black Anticolonial Thought (University of California Press, 2022). Musab traces the themes and arguments of his important new book, which examines the reverberations of anticolonial ideas that spread across the Atlantic between the two world wars. Musab gathers the work of writers and poets, journalists and editors, historians and political theorists whose insights speak urgently to contemporary movements for liberation. This conversation was record...
2023-03-29
33 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
In conversation with Musab Younis
Luke de Noronha welcomes Musab Younis, senior lecturer in politics and international relations at Queen Mary, University of London, and author of On the Scale of the World: The Formation of Black Anticolonial Thought (University of California Press, 2022). Musab traces the themes and arguments of his important new book, which examines the reverberations of anticolonial ideas that spread across the Atlantic between the two world wars. Musab gathers the work of writers and poets, journalists and editors, historians and political theorists whose insights speak urgently to contemporary movements for liberation. Transcript available here: tbc www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/
2023-03-29
33 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Maurice Stierl
Luke de Noronha welcomes Maurice Stierl, researcher at Osnabrück University in Germany and author of Migrant Resistance in Contemporary Europe (Routledge, 2019). Maurice describes the varied patterns of movement and militarisation at the sea borders of Europe: the Atlantic, Central Mediterranean, Aegean and Channel crossings. In both his intellectual and activist work, Maurice joins those demanding free movement for all and an end to Europe’s border violence. This conversation charts those urgent political struggles by and for people on the move.This conversation was recorded on 15th December 2022. Speakers: Dr Luke de Noro...
2023-01-27
42 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Maurice Stierl
Luke de Noronha welcomes Maurice Stierl, researcher at Osnabrück University in Germany and author of Migrant Resistance in Contemporary Europe (Routledge, 2019). Maurice describes the varied patterns of movement and militarisation at the sea borders of Europe: the Atlantic, Central Mediterranean, Aegean and Channel crossings. In both his intellectual and activist work, Maurice joins those demanding free movement for all and an end to Europe’s border violence. This conversation charts those urgent political struggles by and for people on the move. Transcript: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-maurice-stierl This conversation was recorded on 15th December 2022. Speakers: Dr Luke de Noro...
2023-01-27
42 min
The Verso Podcast
What comes after we abolish borders? Gracie Mae Bradley and Luke De Noronha
In this bumper edition of the Verso podcast we talk to authors Gracie Mae Bradley and Luke De Noronha about their new book Against Borders: The Case for Abolition. In it we explore what a world without borders might look like and the intricacies of imagining or advocating for that world. We then talk to Zehrah Hasan of JCWI about practical ways we can get involved in building a borderless world for today and tomorrow. Against Borders: The Case for Abolition is out now: https://www.versobooks.com/books/3983-against-borders?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=author-videos
2022-11-29
54 min
Radicals in Conversation
RIC in-haus: Against Borders
Radicals in Conversation in-haus is a new podcast series collaboration between Pluto Press and Bookhaus, an independent bookshop in Bristol. RIC in-haus is recorded on location at Bookhaus. The bookshop’s ‘in-haus’ events programme features authors of some of the most exciting radical nonfiction being published today. In episode 4, Gracie Mae Bradley and Luke de Noronha are in conversation with Nayya Raza from Bookhaus, about their new co-authored book, Against Borders: The Case for Abolition. They discuss the history and impact of border regimes, 'non-reformist reforms', and offer a utopian vision of the future in which borders - and the...
2022-10-18
56 min
De Verbranders
Ep 20: Deporting Black Britons. With Luke de Noronha (English).
In our conversation today, we talk to Luke de Noronha about his book Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica. Meant as a contribution to the collective struggle against racism and deportation, the book tells the life stories of four men who grew up in the UK, were deported to Jamaica following criminal conviction, and now struggle to survive and rebuild their lives in the Caribbean. We start the conversation talking about Luke’s process of conducting research for this book. We talk about his friendship with the four men he writes about, and what this friendhip meant – and cont...
2022-06-27
1h 18
Global Progressive Radio with Longflexion
Global Progressive Radio Episode 115 With Longflexion
Global Progressive Radio Episode 115 With Longflexion __________ Roald Velden - Tears from the Sky (Original Mix) [MINDED MUSIC] Influence (IN) – Lost in Sound [Lohit Deep] MiraculuM - Burn (Nursultan Kun Remix) [STELLAR FOUNTAIN] Paul (AR) - Dimentional (Figueras Remix) [3rd Avenue] Max Freegrant Feat. Eleonora - Your World (Original Mix) [Freegrant] Tonaco and Noronha - Konvergence (Kamilo Sanclemente Remix) [TRANSENSATIONS RECORDS] Nicholas Van Orton - Forge Night [Balkan Connection] Mayro - Panorama [Movement Recordings] [Luke Brancaccio & Gai Barone - Little Pictures (Original Mix) [Renaissance Records] Ric Niels & Will DeKeizer - Detoner [Deepwibe Underground] Solanca - Golden Tears (feat. Mira Nait) [Immersed Re...
2022-05-19
1h 00
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Kojo Koram
Luke de Noronha welcomes Kojo Koram, Lecturer in Law at Birkbeck School of Law and author of Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the Aftermath of Empire (John Murray Press, 2022). Discussing his recent book, Kojo addresses questions around 20th century decolonisation, neoliberalism and national sovereignty, tying these threads to today’s spiralling global wealth inequality, accelerating climate crisis, migration and bordering, and the precarity expanding across so many different sectors in our society. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-kojo-koram This conversation was recorded on 15th April 2022Speakers: Luke de Noronh...
2022-05-19
35 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Kojo Koram
Luke de Noronha welcomes Kojo Koram, Lecturer in Law at Birkbeck School of Law and author of 'Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the Aftermath of Empire' (John Murray Press, 2022). Discussing his recent book, Kojo addresses questions around 20th century decolonisation, neoliberalism and national sovereignty, tying these threads to today’s spiralling global wealth inequality, accelerating climate crisis, migration and bordering, and the precarity expanding across so many different sectors in our society. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-kojo-koram This conversation was recorded on 15th April 2022 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Ko...
2022-05-19
35 min
Undersong - Race and Conversations Other-wise
Episode 9 - On transnational Blackness with Jean Beaman and Adam Elliott-Cooper
In the latest Undersong conversation, Katucha Bento speaks to Adam Elliot-Cooper and Jean Beaman about how Blackness travels and takes on different iterations, in different geopolitical contexts. Together, they consider the histories and contingencies of colonialism, and their effects on racialised violence and Blackness in the present. Speakers' bios: Jean Beaman is associate professor of sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, with affiliations in Black studies, political science, feminist science, and the center for Black Studies research. Her research is ethnographic and focusses on race, ethnicity, racism, international migration, and state sponsored violence in both France and the...
2022-04-07
59 min
Who do we think we are?
What do Clause 9 (Nationality and Borders Bill) and the history of citizenship deprivation in the UK tell us about Britishness today?
Did you know that British citizenship can be cancelled or removed? And that when the Nationality and Borders Bill passes into legislation the UK Home Secretary will be able to remove citizenship from individuals without giving them prior notice? Certain conditions may accompany this, but the government’s past record on citizenship deprivation shows that these powers have disproportionately by exercised against those from Britain’s racially and religiously minoritized communities. In this episode we look in depth at how Clause 9 of the Nationality and Borders Bill sits in a longer history of citizenship deprivation . Over time, the...
2022-02-04
31 min
Who do we think we are?
What do Clause 9 (Nationality and Borders Bill) and the history of citizenship deprivation in the UK tell us about Britishness today?
Did you know that British citizenship can be cancelled or removed? And that when the Nationality and Borders Bill passes into legislation the UK Home Secretary will be able to remove citizenship from individuals without giving them prior notice? Certain conditions may accompany this, but the government’s past record on citizenship deprivation shows that these powers have disproportionately by exercised against those from Britain’s racially and religiously minoritized communities. In this episode we look in depth at how Clause 9 of the Nationality and Borders Bill sits in a longer history of citizenship deprivation . Over time, the...
2022-02-04
31 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Lisa Lowe
Luke de Noronha welcomes Lisa Lowe, Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, Race and Migration, to talk about her book, The Intimacies of Four Continents, where she examines links between transatlantic slavery, Asian indenture, imperial trades and colonialism. Concerning liberalism, Lisa discusses how ideas of reason, civilisation and freedom are continually dividing the human according to a coloniality of power or a colonial division of humanities, affirming liberty for European man but subordinating the colonised and disposed. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-lisa-lowe This conversation was recorded on 19th July 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial...
2021-11-24
30 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Lisa Lowe
Luke de Noronha welcomes Lisa Lowe, Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, Race and Migration, to talk about her book, The Intimacies of Four Continents, where she examines links between transatlantic slavery, Asian indenture, imperial trades and colonialism. Concerning liberalism, Lisa discusses how ideas of reason, civilisation and freedom are continually dividing the human according to a coloniality of power or a colonial division of humanities, affirming liberty for European man but subordinating the colonised and disposed. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-lisa-loweThis conversation was recorded on 19th July 2021S...
2021-11-24
30 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Laleh Khalili
Laleh Khalili,, Professor of International Politics and author of Sinews of War & Trade, joins us for a conversation on land reclamation, dredging and the role of maritime infrastructures as conduits of the movement of technologies, capital, people and cargo. Addressing the significant bodies of water around which a politics has taken shape, Laleh discusses the tension of the sea as a romanticised incredible and abstract space, yet also a space of death, exploitation, slavery and colonialism, highlighting the geoeconomical inequalities in the world. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-laleh-khalili This co...
2021-11-03
40 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Laleh Khalili
Laleh Khalili, Professor of International Politics and author of 'Sinews of War & Trade', joins us for a conversation on land reclamation, dredging and the role of maritime infrastructures as conduits of the movement of technologies, capital, people and cargo. Addressing the significant bodies of water around which a politics has taken shape, Laleh discusses the tension of the sea as a romanticised incredible and abstract space, yet also a space of death, exploitation, slavery and colonialism, highlighting the geoeconomical inequalities in the world. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-laleh-khalili This conversation was recorded on 30th June 2021 Speakers: Luke de...
2021-11-03
40 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of Deportation to Jamaica
In this seminar, Luke de Noronha discussed the findings from his book 'Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of Deportation to Jamaica' (2020) In the last two decades, the UK has deported thousands of people to Jamaica. Many of these 'deportees' left the Caribbean as infants and grew up in the UK. Deporting Black Britons traces the life stories of four such men who have been exiled from their parents, partners, children and friends by deportation. It explores how 'Black Britons' survive once they are returned to Jamaica, and questions what their memories of poverty, racist policing and illegality reveal about contemporary Britain...
2021-10-21
32 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Nandita Sharma
Luke de Noronha welcomes Nandita Sharma, activist scholar and Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, to discuss borders, migration and citizenship in relation to the pandemic and climate catastrophes. Nandita addresses the demand for a planetary commons, and the need to live in a worldly space in which the fundamental political foundation is freedom from exclusion, freedom from dispossession and freedom from displacement.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-nandita-sharmaThis conversation was recorded on 21st June 2021Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnic...
2021-09-08
31 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Nandita Sharma
Luke de Noronha welcomes Nandita Sharma, activist scholar and Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, to discuss borders, migration and citizenship in relation to the pandemic and climate catastrophes. Nandita addresses the demand for a planetary commons, and the need to live in a worldly space in which the fundamental political foundation is freedom from exclusion, freedom from dispossession and freedom from displacement. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-nandita-sharma This conversation was recorded on 21st June 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Nandita Sharma, Pr...
2021-09-08
31 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Gracie Mae Bradley
Luke de Noronha is joined by Gracie Mae Bradley, policy expert, writer and campaigner, and Interim Director of Liberty. Involved in the wider grassroots movement for social justice in the UK and having written extensively on state racism and civil liberties, Gracie joins us to speak about the state response and policing throughout the pandemic, race disproportionality, and the trend towards pre-criminalisation.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-gracie-mae-bradley This conversation was recorded on 24th June 2021Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker R...
2021-08-11
39 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Gracie Mae Bradley
Luke de Noronha is joined by Gracie Mae Bradley, policy expert, writer and campaigner, and Interim Director of Liberty. Involved in the wider grassroots movement for social justice in the UK and having written extensively on state racism and civil liberties, Gracie joins us to speak about the state response and policing throughout the pandemic, race disproportionality, and the trend towards pre-criminalisation. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-gracie-mae-bradley This conversation was recorded on 24th June 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Gracie Mae Bradley, policy expert, writer and campaigner, and...
2021-08-11
39 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Adam Elliott-Cooper
Adam Elliott-Cooper joins Luke de Noronha to talk about resistance to racist state violence in Britain, and how this resistance is shaped by histories of imperialism and anti-imperialism. Discussing his book, Black Resistance to British Policing (MUP, 2021), Adam situates current mobilisations in a longer history of anti-racist resistance in the UK, and explores the politics of abolitionism and anti-colonial struggles in the context of Black Britain and Black politics in the 21st century. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-adam-elliott-cooperThis conversation was recorded on 26th May 2021 Speakers: L...
2021-07-08
37 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Adam Elliott-Cooper
Adam Elliott-Cooper joins Luke de Noronha to talk about resistance to racist state violence in Britain, and how this resistance is shaped by histories of imperialism and anti-imperialism. Discussing his book, 'Black Resistance to British Policing' (MUP, 2021), Adam situates current mobilisations in a longer history of anti-racist resistance in the UK, and explores the politics of abolitionism and anti-colonial struggles in the context of Black Britain and Black politics in the 21st century. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-adam-elliott-cooper This conversation was recorded on 26th May 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker...
2021-07-08
37 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Robbie Shilliam
Luke de Noronha welcomes Robbie Shilliam, Professor of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University, to discuss his recent book Decolonizing Politics: An Introduction (Polity Press, 2021). Across his writing, Robbie’s made several critical interventions on questions surrounding race, colonialism and global order, and in Decolonizing Politics he methodologically looks at what it might mean to decolonize political science by reconceptualizing and reimagining the logics of the field.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-robbie-shilliamThis conversation was recorded on 17th May 2021Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial St...
2021-06-23
35 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Robbie Shilliam
Luke de Noronha welcomes Robbie Shilliam, Professor of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University, to discuss his recent book 'Decolonizing Politics: An Introduction' (Polity Press, 2021). Across his writing, Robbie’s made several critical interventions on questions surrounding race, colonialism and global order, and in 'Decolonizing Politics' he methodologically looks at what it might mean to decolonize political science by reconceptualizing and reimagining the logics of the field. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-robbie-shilliam This conversation was recorded on 17th May 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Robbie Shilliam, Professor of In...
2021-06-23
35 min
Radicals in Conversation
Empire's Endgame: Racism and the British State
We are in a moment of profound overlapping crises. The landscape of politics and entitlement is being rapidly remade. As movements against colonial legacies and state violence coincide with the rise of authoritarian regimes, it is the lens of racism, and the politics of race, that offers the sharpest focus. The 'hostile environment' and the fallout from Brexit have, over the last few years, thrown the centrality of race into sharp relief, and yet discussions around racism have too often continued to focus on individual behaviours. Empire’s Endgame foregrounds instead the wider political and economic context, an...
2021-03-23
44 min
With Reason
Deporting Black Britons, with Luke de Noronha
In the last two decades, the UK has deported thousands of people to Jamaica, many of whom left that country as children and grew up in the UK. Luke de Noronha talks to Alice Bloch about his moving and urgent study of four such young men. How have racism and inequality shaped their lives? What hope remains? And why does language matter when we talk about ‘foreign criminals’? A conversation about borders and exclusion, citizenship and listening. For readers of Paul Gilroy, Gary Younge, Amelia Gentleman, Les Back and Reni Eddo-Lodge.Hosts: Alice Bloch and Sami...
2021-03-23
39 min
Black Agenda Radio
Black Agenda Radio 03.22.21
Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Margaret Kimberley, along with my co-host Glen Ford. Coming up: the prolific radical professor Joy James speaks out on decolonizing the Black movement in the United States. Dr. James urges activists to condemn the militarization of US African policy, as well as militarized policing in Black communities in this country. And, Great Britain, which grew rich through centuries of global looting and mass enslavement, is now eager to deport thousands of Black residents as morally unfit to reside in the Un...
2021-03-22
55 min
Black Agenda Radio
Black Agenda Radio 03.22.21
Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Margaret Kimberley, along with my co-host Glen Ford. Coming up: the prolific radical professor Joy James speaks out on decolonizing the Black movement in the United States. Dr. James urges activists to condemn the militarization of US African policy, as well as militarized policing in Black communities in this country. And, Great Britain, which grew rich through centuries of global looting and mass enslavement, is now eager to deport thousands of Black residents as morally unfit to reside in the Un...
2021-03-22
55 min
1Xtra Talks with Richie Brave
Deportation: Osime Brown's story
This week, Osime Brown's story has been in the news. Osime has just been released from prison, after a five year sentence. He doesn't have legal British citizenship, so he's been told he's going to be deported to Jamaica - a country where he last lived age 4. Reece and Shahlaa are taking a look at this policy of automatic deportation. Is it working? They hear from Osime's mum, Joan, about her fears for her son. Osime is autistic, has heart problems and poor mental health. Joan worries that if he's sent to Jamaica alone, he won't survive.
2021-03-11
53 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Nicholas De Genova
Nicholas De Genova joins Luke de Noronha for a conversation about the relationship between bordering, migration and the pandemic, and his current thinking around The Migrant Metropolis. Nicholas discusses why it’s important to think of migrant crises as racial crises, recapturing the subjectivity of migration, and the autonomy of migration as a framework.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-nicholas-de-genovaThis conversation was recorded on 8th February 2021Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Nicholas De Genova, Professor and Chair of the Dep...
2021-03-10
32 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Nicholas De Genova
Nicholas De Genova joins Luke de Noronha for a conversation about the relationship between bordering, migration and the pandemic, and his current thinking around The Migrant Metropolis. Nicholas discusses why it’s important to think of migrant crises as racial crises, recapturing the subjectivity of migration, and the autonomy of migration as a framework. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-nicholas-de-genova This conversation was recorded on 8th February 2021 Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre // Nicholas de Genova, Professor and Chair of the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies at the University of Ho...
2021-03-10
32 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
In conversation with Les Back
Luke de Noronha is joined by Les Back, Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths, to talk about the concept of the ‘metropolitan paradox’, reflecting on how the events of 1981 – the New Cross house fire and the resulting Black People’s Day of Action march – formed his thinking and future academic work. Discussing how the tragedy of Grenfell Tower paralleled that of 1981, Les explores how the demonstrations and silent walks provide a service of hope.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-les-backThis conversation was recorded on 29th January 2021Speakers: Luke de Noronha, Lect...
2021-02-18
29 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC In conversation with Les Back
Luke de Noronha is joined by Les Back, Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths, to talk about the concept of the ‘metropolitan paradox’, reflecting on how the events of 1981 – the New Cross house fire and the resulting Black People’s Day of Action march – formed his thinking and future academic work. Discussing how the tragedy of Grenfell Tower paralleled that of 1981, Les explores how the demonstrations and silent walks provide a service of hope. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-conversation-les-back This conversation was recorded on 29th January 2021 Speaker: Luke de Noronha, Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity & Postcolonial Studies, UCL Sarah Parker Remond Cen...
2021-02-18
29 min
Surviving Society Productions
S2/E3 Critical whiteness studies, racism & militirisation (Vron Ware & Luke de Noronha)
The Surviving Society team are extremely excited to present #TheSpotlightSeries. In these episodes Chantelle and Tissot take a step back from the mic and handover to both local and global academics, researchers, and community organizers. The Spotlight series continues with the themes from the original Surviving Society podcast focused on race, class, anti- racism and social movements. Guest hosts: Vron Ware has worked as a journalist, photographer and academic in the field of cultural geography and sociology. Her books include Beyond the Pale: white women, racism and history (Verso 1992/2015), Out of Whiteness: color, politics & culture (with Les Back, Chicago 2002), Military...
2020-12-15
52 min
Philosophica
DEPORTATION
Podcast: Thinking Allowed (LS 58 · TOP 0.5% what is this?)Episode: DEPORTATIONPub date: 2020-11-18Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationDEPORTATION: Laurie Taylor explores the lives of people whose criminal convictions have led to them being deported to Jamaica, although many of them left the Caribbean as children and grew up in the UK. Luke de Noronha, Simon Research Fellow in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Manchester, describes the experiences of a group who are regarded as undeserving of sympathy, compared to...
2020-11-19
29 min
Thinking Allowed
DEPORTATION
DEPORTATION: Laurie Taylor explores the lives of people whose criminal convictions have led to them being deported to Jamaica, although many of them left the Caribbean as children and grew up in the UK. Luke de Noronha, Simon Research Fellow in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Manchester, describes the experiences of a group who are regarded as undeserving of sympathy, compared to the victims of the Windrush scandal of 2018. But are such hard and fast divisions fair or accurate? They’re joined by Adam Goodman, Assistant Professor of History and Latin American Studies at the Un...
2020-11-18
29 min
The Connected Sociologies Podcast
From Windrush to Grenfell - Dr Luke de Noronha
Both the Windrush scandal and the Grenfell fire raise urgent questions for sociologists, and for people concerned about tackling racism more broadly. Both remind us that racism is not just about individuals being intolerant, prejudiced, or bigoted, but about the social and institutional structures that organise who is entitled to what. In this lecture, I invite us to ask some questions about racism, rights and exclusion – particularly in relation to the history and contemporary dynamics of immigration control. It is by asking who is a member of the nation, who is excluded, how this changes over time, and what ca...
2020-10-24
23 min
UCL Sarah Parker Remond Centre Podcast
Short Takes: Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica
Our latest Short Takes podcast is provided by Luke de Noronha, author of Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica. “An ethnography of deportation, and therefore an ethnography of separation, absence and exile”, Luke talks us through the motivation for his research and its contribution to our collective understanding and shared struggles.Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-deporting-black-britons-portraits-deportation-jamaicaSpeaker: Luke de Noronha, Simon Research Fellow at the University of ManchesterImage: Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica (Manchester University Press, 2020)Producer and Editor: Kaissa Karhuw...
2020-10-01
08 min
UCL Institute of Advanced Studies
SPRC Short Takes: Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica
Our latest Short Takes podcast is provided by Luke de Noronha, author of Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica. “An ethnography of deportation, and therefore an ethnography of separation, absence and exile”, Luke talks us through the motivation for his research and its contribution to our collective understanding and shared struggles. Transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/transcript-deporting-black-britons-portraits-deportation-jamaica Speaker: Luke de Noronha, Simon Research Fellow at the University of Manchester Image: Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica (Manchester University Press, 2020) Producer and Editor: Kaissa Karhu www.ucl.ac.uk/racism-racialisation/podcasts
2020-10-01
08 min
Surviving Society Productions
E102 Luke de Noronha: Life after deportation
Luke joined us for a second time to discuss the publication of his book, Deporting Black Britons: Portraits of deportation to Jamaica Useful links: https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526143990 https://www.theguardian.com/law/2020/aug/18/deportation-jamaica-britain-windrush-scandal-foreign-aid https://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/deportation-cuts-black-britons/ https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-guardians-audio-long-reads/id587347784?i=1000491968231
2020-09-29
50 min
Bass House • Tech House • Deep House
Equalizor - Brazilian Bass - December 2019 - Mix Wednesday - DHM
As we close in on another year of amazing music, new producers, and different sounds, I found myself inspired to put out my final mix for the year. This mix includes a majority of the dope producers that I look up to in the music industry. It is 100% Brazilian Bass inspired and has tunes from producers I have never heard of before this year and the usual veteran Brazilian Vets with a twist of funk for you people that like to dance. Thanks to everyone that supports our Denver House Community and our show Mix Wednesday. This mix along with...
2019-12-22
59 min
Jamaican Diaspora
Luke de Noronha
Luke is a PhD student in the anthropology department at Oxford University and his doctorate explores the deportation of ex-offenders from the UK to Jamaica. Jamaican Diaspora - www.JamaicanDiaspora.com
2019-12-07
31 min
Surviving Society Productions
E050 Luke de Noronha: Detention, deportation and state violence
Featuring extracts from Denico and Chris from Deportation Discs, Luke de Noronha joined us to discuss his on going research (and forthcoming book) on detention, deportation, bordering and the racialised violence of the state. Useful links - https://soundcloud.com/deportationdiscs https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01419870.2019.1585559?af=R https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/3675-race-class-and-brexit-thinking-from-detention https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jun/07/windrush-legal-illegal-migrants-caribbean-deportation-uk https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/feb/06/sajid-javid-windrush-deportation-criminal-jamaica *Our use of ‘towards a more sociable sociology’ was inspired by our reading & studying of Migrant City by Les Back, Shamser Sinha, Charlynne Bryan, Vlad Baraku & Mardoche Yembi. *For an audible intr...
2019-08-13
1h 05
Border Criminologies
Banished to Jamaica: Portraits of Deportation
Luke de Noronha, University of Oxford - 24 Jan 2017
2017-04-12
43 min