7 episodes

The Stephen Lawrence Research Centre (SLRC) opened its doors in 2019 and is a uniquely positioned physical space in the UK Higher Education landscape to study the politics of race and racisms in its many forms and guises. The SLRC is the current home of the Stephen Lawrence Exhibition and the Stephen Lawrence Archive. The archive was kindly donated to De Montfort University by Baroness Doreen Lawrence of Clarendon, Stephen’s mother and former Chancellor of DMU and has inspired the conversations in this series in memory of Stephen.

Race and Racism in our Modern World The Stephen Lawrence Research Centre

    • Society & Culture

The Stephen Lawrence Research Centre (SLRC) opened its doors in 2019 and is a uniquely positioned physical space in the UK Higher Education landscape to study the politics of race and racisms in its many forms and guises. The SLRC is the current home of the Stephen Lawrence Exhibition and the Stephen Lawrence Archive. The archive was kindly donated to De Montfort University by Baroness Doreen Lawrence of Clarendon, Stephen’s mother and former Chancellor of DMU and has inspired the conversations in this series in memory of Stephen.

    S1 E1: Welcome to the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre Podcast

    S1 E1: Welcome to the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre Podcast

    Click here to listen to the full Stephen Lawrence Research Centre Podcast Series
    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragic racist murder of Stephen Lawrence on the 22 April 1993, in South East London in the UK, the SLRC have produced a podcast series in collaboration with Weyland Mckenzie-Witter to commemorate the monumental meaning and significance of this anniversary.
    The SLRC opened its doors in 2019 with the intention of being a uniquely positioned physical space in the UKHE landscape to study the politics of race and racisms in its many forms and guises. The SLRC is the current home of the Stephen Lawrence Exhibition and the Stephen Lawrence Archive. The archive was kindly loaned to De Montfort University by Baroness Doreen Lawrence of Clarendon, Stephen’s mother and former Chancellor of DMU and has inspired the conversations in this series in memory of Stephen.
    It is impossible to talk about race and racism in 1990s Britain without reference to the monumental impact of the Lawrence family’s fight for justice for their beloved son, and the publication of the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry report, often referred to as the Macpherson Report.
    Over the past 30 years, its easy to think that there is nothing more to be said about Stephen, his life and his family’s campaign for justice. However, this series of conversations have been collectively curated by the SLRC team to remind us all there is so much that has been left un-said and so much more for us to understand about the power of Stephen’s ongoing legacy.
     
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter at Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    @weylandmck
    weylandmck.com
    nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music by AyChibs 
    @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre
     

    • 3 min
    S1 E2: Race and Racism in the 1990s "Part One" with Gus John and Adam Elliott-Cooper

    S1 E2: Race and Racism in the 1990s "Part One" with Gus John and Adam Elliott-Cooper

    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    In part one of the first episode Professor Gus John and Dr Adam Elliot Cooper join the SLRC Legacy In Action research fellow, Dr Fatima Rajina, to discuss the way Stephen Lawrence’s death stirred the nation in a way that changed the entire landscape of conversations around race relations throughout the 1990s. The most intriguing aspect of it all was how it was covered in the media, primarily print media. The discussion for this podcast will focus in on different clippings from the newspapers that covered the trial and the family in this decade. This episode is in two parts and will consider how the media landscape has changed since and what race conversations look like today. 
    Guests: Professor Gus John, Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper
    Hosted by: Dr Fatima Rajina
    Dr Fatima Rajina is an SLRC Legacy In Action research fellow whose work focuses on British Bangladeshi Muslims and the changing landscape of race, dress and language. Recent publications have appeared in Sociology and Yearbook of Muslims in Europe.
    Professor Gus John is an academic and equality and human rights campaigner. He was instrumental in the setting up Black Saturday/supplementary schools in the 1960s and Britain’s first Black Director of Education in 1989. For over six decades, Professor Gus John has been campaigning for racial equality and has been a consistent voice in the commentary and activism on issues within the education sector in Britain’s inner cities.
    Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper is a Lecturer in Public and Social Policy at Queen Mary University of London. His first monograph, Black Resistance to British Policing, was published by Manchester University Press in May 2021. Dr Elliott-Cooper is also co-author of Empire’s Endgame: Racism and the British State Pluto Press, 2021.
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter at Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    Twitter/X: @weylandmck
    Web: weylandmck.com
    Web: nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music: AyChibs @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X: @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    Stephen Lawrence Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, LE1 9BH. United Kingdom
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre
     
     

    • 32 min
    S1 E3: Race and Racism in the 1990s "Part Two", with Gus John and Adam Elliott-Cooper

    S1 E3: Race and Racism in the 1990s "Part Two", with Gus John and Adam Elliott-Cooper

    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    In part two of the first episode, the conversation continues with Professor Gus John and Dr Adam Elliot Cooper joining SLRC Legacy In Action research fellow, Dr Fatima Rajina, to discuss the way Stephen Lawrence’s death stirred the nation in a way that changed the entire landscape of conversations around race relations throughout the 1990s. The most intriguing aspect of it all was how it was covered in the media, primarily print media. The discussion for this podcast focuses in on different clippings from the newspapers that covered the trial and the family in this decade.
    Hosted by: Dr Fatima Rajina
    Guests: Professor Gus John & Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper
    Dr Fatima Rajina is an SLRC Legacy In Action research fellow whose work focuses on British Bangladeshi Muslims and the changing landscape of race, dress and language. Recent publications have appeared in Sociology and Yearbook of Muslims in Europe.
    Professor Gus John is an academic and equality and human rights campaigner. He was instrumental in the setting up Black Saturday/supplementary schools in the 1960s and Britain’s first Black Director of Education in 1989. For over six decades, Professor Gus John has been campaigning for racial equality and has been a consistent voice in the commentary and activism on issues within the education sector in Britain’s inner cities.
    Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper is a Lecturer in Public and Social Policy at Queen Mary University of London. His first monograph, Black Resistance to British Policing, was published by Manchester University Press in May 2021. Dr Elliott-Cooper is also co-author of Empire’s Endgame: Racism and the British State published by Pluto Press, 2021.
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter at Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    Twitter/X: @weylandmck
    Web: weylandmck.com
    Web: nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music: AyChibs @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X: @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    Stephen Lawrence Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, LE1 9BH. United Kingdom
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre
     
     

    • 31 min
    S1 E4: Greenwich Echoes: A Mother-Daughter Perspective on the Murder of Stephen Lawrence

    S1 E4: Greenwich Echoes: A Mother-Daughter Perspective on the Murder of Stephen Lawrence

    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    When Stephen Lawrence was murdered in 1993 to what extent did the media or academic scholarship explore or acknowledge the grief of Doreen Lawrence and other black mothers who were once again reminded of how unworthy society perceived them and the lives of their children? 
    This episode led by Rayann Bryan will explore the impact of Stephen’s murder on black mothers who may have felt some proximity to the grief and anguish of Baroness Lawrence. Claire Davis and her mother talk about their experience living and growing up in Eltham where Stephen was murdered. They reflect on the racial tensions and complexities of living in the area and how Stephen's murder impacted them and the rest of the communities.
     
    Hosted by: Rayann Bryan
    Guests: Claire Davis & Dahlia Davis
    Rayann Bryan is a PhD student at the University of Greenwich. Her doctoral research is focused on investigating how immigration to the UK in the Windrush era has created an intergenerational effect of racial melancholia and trauma for the mothers and daughters of Windrush
    Rayann is also the founder of the Thelma Matilda Alves Foundation which is dedicated to addressing the prejudices and racism that inhibit black women from gaining access and working in the UK mental health sector and is currently Equality Lead at the NHS Federation
    Rayann Bryan's article for gal-dem magazine thinking through the idea of black universities in the UK.
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter at Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    Twitter/X: @weylandmck
    Web: weylandmck.com
    Web: nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music: AyChibs @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X: @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    Stephen Lawrence Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, LE1 9BH. United Kingdom
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre
     
     
     

    • 33 min
    S1 E5: Place and Space in the Making of Race and Racism "Part One"

    S1 E5: Place and Space in the Making of Race and Racism "Part One"

    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    In part one of this episode, Yusef is in conversation with Brixton residents Valcie, Hurley and Patrick. The discussion draws on experiences of life in Brixton.  Juxtaposing this with Rayann’s episode on life in Eltham in the UK, we hear about a neighbourhood where Black cultures are shared and celebrated, but also how racisms and inequalities have restricted access to housing, security and opportunity.
    When listened to in conjunction with the rest of the series this episode helps us to understand the significance of space in the lives of minoritised people and the trade offs that are made between living in the multicultural inner city, where interpersonal racism and the threat of racist organisations can be reduced, but other urban problems like underfunded public services, over policing and limited housing stock make life challenging in different ways.
    These experiences contrast in some ways with those living in Eltham and help us understand better the textures and choices black and brown families may have to make when considering where they live in the UK. 
    With thanks to guests: Valcie, Hurley and Patrick
    Host: Dr Yusef Bakkali
    Dr Yusef Bakkali is a Legacy In Action Research Fellow at the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre and grew up in the South London district of Brixton. Through education and later academia, Yusef found sociology equipped him with a language to diagnose and challenge social problems affecting himself and the community. Developing a research and teaching praxis focused around social justice and change, Yusef encourages students to develop critical skills, developing fresh perspectives to aid them in tackling the challenges, both of today and the future.
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter for Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    Twitter/X: @weylandmck
    Web: weylandmck.com
    Web: nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music: AyChibs @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X: @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    Stephen Lawrence Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, LE1 9BH. United Kingdom
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre
     
     

    • 38 min
    S1 E6: Place and Space in the Making of Race and Racism "Part Two"

    S1 E6: Place and Space in the Making of Race and Racism "Part Two"

    Content warning: May contain examples of extreme racist violence and language.
    In part two of this episode, Yusef is in conversation with Brixton residents Valcie, Hurley and Patrick. The discussion draws on experiences of life in Brixton.  Juxtaposing this with Rayann’s episode on life in Eltham in the UK, we hear about a neighbourhood where Black cultures are shared and celebrated, but also how racisms and inequalities have restricted access to housing, security and opportunity.
    When listened to in conjunction with the rest of the series this episode helps us to understand the significance of space in the lives of minoritised people and the trade offs that are made between living in the multicultural inner city, where interpersonal racism and the threat of racist organisations can be reduced, but other urban problems like underfunded public services, over policing and limited housing stock make life challenging in different ways.
    These experiences contrast in some ways with those living in Eltham and help us understand better the textures and choices black and brown families may have to make when considering where they live in the UK. 
    With thanks to guests: Valcie, Hurley and Patrick
    Host: Dr Yusef Bakkali
    Dr Yusef Bakkali is a Legacy In Action Research Fellow at the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre and grew up in the South London district of Brixton. Through education and later academia, Yusef found sociology equipped him with a language to diagnose and challenge social problems affecting himself and the community. Developing a research and teaching praxis focused around social justice and change, Yusef encourages students to develop critical skills, developing fresh perspectives to aid them in tackling the challenges, both of today and the future.
    Produced by Weyland McKenzie-Witter for Nello and the People’s Production Ltd
    Twitter/X: @weylandmck
    Web: weylandmck.com
    Web: nelloandthem.co.uk
    Music: AyChibs @Aychibs
    Image: And Still She Rises by Marcus Dove
    Design: Angy Ebrahim 
    Stay connected with the Stephen Lawrence Research Centre:
    www.dmu.ac.uk/slrc
    Twitter/X: @SLRC_DMU
    Join the mailing list by emailing slrc@dmu.ac.uk
    Stephen Lawrence Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, LE1 9BH. United Kingdom
    © 2023, Stephen Lawrence Research Centre

    • 37 min

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