Richard Dowden
Director, Royal African Society
Richard Dowden is Executive Director of the Royal African Society in London (www.royalafricansociety.org).
Richard worked for the Times until 1986 when he became Africa Editor of the Independent and in 1995 took the post of Africa Editor at The Economist. He also made three television documentaries for the BBC and Channel 4 on Africa.
Richard worked for the Times until 1986 when he became Africa Editor of the Independent and in 1995 took the post of Africa Editor at The Economist. He also made three television documentaries for the BBC and Channel 4 on Africa.
The journalist does not have faith in a massive financial aid package for Africa.
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Richard Dowden says Mugabe will not bow from power if only to spite the West.
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The journalist says prevention is the key step that no effort has been able to successfully deliver on yet.
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Journalist Richard Dowden says solidarity is the goal but it’s handicapped by regional allegiances.
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The journalist notes a great deal of enthusiasm for Obama but no homegrown leader of equal stature.
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The journalist analyzes China’s far-reaching role in Africa’s mineral sector.
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The journalist says colonialism was “short enough to destroy leadership in Africa but not long enough to replace it with anything else.”
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The journalist explains the dysfunction that plagues Africa’s politics.
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The journalist advises not going to Africa with the idea of being a crusader.
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The journalist tells the story of the world’s leading organization for African affairs.
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The journalist first entered the field after missionaries got him a teaching job in Uganda in 1971.
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