Geography is history: Going back to the start

Uganda, the peal of Africa and where the Ugandan Asian Diaspora story all began.  But as I go back to the start, it isn't only the tales of oppression and brutality associated with Uganda of the 1970s that I think of, but the expectation of finding answers to some long-held questions about the country as it once was, and as it is now.

Us and them: The curse of celebrity activism

The core belief at the heart of humanitarianism is indisputably a noble one, faultless even; who could argue with the principle that we ought collectively to take responsibility for improving human welfare?  And yet the realisation of that ideal is often muddied by the agendas of the neediest, self-proclaimed worthiest of humanitarian ambassadors — celebrities.

In praise of paper

For anyone who’s ever harboured a perverse, semi-intellectual fetish for stationery, there is no substitute for the crisp, clean greeting that is the opening page of a new notebook. It’s easy to romanticise the humble pen and paper in an age when digital communication is taking over the world.  There’s no arguing with how computers have propelled productivity - the internet is flooded with an infinite tirade of verbiage.  But is this necessarily a good thing?

The pleasure of a blue sky moment

The phrase “blue sky thinking” litters conversations these days, the supposition being that it will prompt radical new ideas to flutter through. But rather than sparking the imagination, the call for forced creativity can invoke dread.  And rightly so; as Orwell pointed out, this kind of inane management speak is a deliberate distortion of reality.

Love, poetry, women and war

Based on the advice of writers from Stephen King to David Foster Wallace, Susan Sontag, Henry Miller, Zadie Smith and many more, when I cannot write my designated daily quota of 500 words on one subject, I turn to reading.  I scour the net, my bookshelves and every local bookshop, in search of inspiration, thirsty for facts that might ultimately furnish each of my projects with added authenticity.

The lost art of letters

How will we document the past in the future without an attic full of letters to pore over? That was one of the questions posed by the writer Simon Garfield as he and Shaun Usher, creator of the website Letters of Note, made a compelling case for the lost art of letter writing. 

Dying to get here: Blog Action Day 2013

Nearly 1,000 people die every year in the Mediterranean Sea, which is fast becoming the graveyard of Europe. Why would anyone expose themselves to this continual cycle of trauma? Often they have no choice, it’s either face death in one country or risk it to another, in the hope that life is surely better elsewhere.  Isn’t this something that we all have a right to hope for – a life unfettered by violence, harassment, poverty and daily hardship?

Past matters: Writing other people's history

Documenting the past comes with a frightening number of challenges that at times beg the question, why bother?  With historical writing, the challenges are even more pronounced, particularly the lack of people and sources against which to check your facts.  Depending on how you look at it, it’s either the greatest investigative adventure or a guaranteed route to sleepless nights as the unknown quantities swirl around your tormented mind.

The thinking woman's narrative

Women don’t make good researchers.  Feminism needs re-branding.  Education will only give girls a misplaced sense of power.  These are just some of the judgements pedalled in recent debates about the gender gap.  The common denominator seems to be the idea that women are neither capable nor worthy of changing the social landscape which, according to those harbouring such archaic views, they should simply accept as their lot.  Thankfully, the many who disagree have something far more interesting to say.

The raw matter of the examined life: Straw Dogs by John Gray

If you follow Socrates' line of thought, the unexamined life is not worth living.  But what if, when you examine it, it’s worth even less?  That is John Gray’s conclusion; in fact it’s the beginning, middle and end of his entirely nihilistic polemic, Straw Dogs, in which he catalogues a history of rapacious human activity, taking down science, philosophy and everything in between.

How to overcome fear & procrastination aka writer's block

Procrastination has always been a problem for writers, and at no time more than in the age of instant digital or technological gratification.  There are infinite distractions at the tip of your fingers, which instead of being used to expel an eloquent stream of original thinking, are reduced to fumbling across the internet.

What's your story? Top tips for content marketing

Whether you’re a journalist, a fiction writer, a biographer, a marketer or a corporate PR pro, the art of telling a good story will invariably lie at the heart of what you do.  Attracting the attention of your audience and then holding them captive is an invaluable skill.  Stories that inspire, inform, entertain and move are undoubtedly the best way to engage with people and make an impression.

Human rights, human wrongs: Who cares?

I recently returned from a trip to Geneva, the human rights headquarters of the world, you might say.  Only what struck me from the people I met, the stories I heard and the places I visited was not the undeniable force of activism and political will that characterises the city, but the sad sense that for the people it represents, the human rights movement is losing its grip.

Understanding the disturbed mind

When it comes to articulating physical pain, we have a myriad of descriptors at our disposal and a universally-understood terminology for bodily ailments.  The same isn’t wholly true for psychological disorders, the complexities of which are matched by the vague and fluid terms ascribed to them.

World Humanitarian Day: Changing the world one conversation at a time

Is there one word that sums up what the world needs more of?  That’s the question posed by the UN for this year’s World Humanitarian Day, when it pledges to “turn those words into currency”.  Change, peace, hope and teamwork (the latter as favoured by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon) spring instinctively to mind.  Along with justice and equality, they are among the trending suggestions in the run up to 19 August.  But just how realistic is it to think that words have the power to accelerate global change to the extent that is needed? 

Failure: The great unexpected result

How do you explain failure in a way that doesn’t suggest you don’t know what you’re doing?  It’s a question that preoccupies many scientists, particularly those in the early stages of their career who have as much to prove outside of the lab as they do within it.   

Memories and the value of narrative truth

Memories are the defining feature of human identity.  They underlie the decisions that help determine our future, they colour our reflections on the past, and they characterise our life stories.  But our headspace is notoriously fluid, susceptible to damage, change and loss.   The stories that we weave together from what we can recall, while an inimitable gateway into our personalities, are not entirely true.  

Welcome to Britain: The Ugandan Asian Diaspora

On 5 August 1972 – informed by the census that had been carried out the previous year – Idi Amin announced that he had a dream in which it was revealed to him that some 60,000 Asians who were not classed as Ugandans (defined as such by a convoluted arbitrary lineage) must leave Uganda, declaring, “Asians came to Uganda to build the railway, the railway is finished, they must leave now”. 

Fame, famine and the aid game

“There is nothing like a disaster to boost an aid agency’s profile.”  It’s a truism evidenced by every humanitarian crisis in recent history, from the Sudanese famine captured by Kevin Carter’s iconic photograph as described in The Bang Bang Club, to the crisis now gripping West Africa.