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Content provided by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
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MoU food: An entrée to development

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Manage episode 291601261 series 2921516
Content provided by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Aid is a darned sight livelier than that that is described in the bloodless language of official records and reports. So what do chlorinated phrases in development like capacity building look like when done right? We begin in Dili, Timor Leste, at Agora Food Studio, a restaurant set up by two slightly world-weary aid workers who found that they could achieve more in setting up a place that celebrates East Timorese food and developing East Timorese chefs and restauranteurs than through all those reports that they'd previously been slaving over.

We hear from Alva Lim and Mark Notaras, the two architects of Agora, as well as the restaurant’s project manager Paula Torres. Paula’s parents, Petrolina Torres and Paulo Soares da Cruz can be heard speaking in Tetun throughout the podcast. We also talk to the author of a work-in-progress Tetun-English idiom dictionary, Anacleto Ribeiro, to learn why food is the perfect entrée into understanding Timor Leste, and an ideal model for thinking about development.

The full menu: Agora Food Studio/ Timor Leste Food Lab: Twitter | Website

Recommended reading: Much of the material we had to fillet out of the podcast has been condensed into a piece for the Development Policy Centre blog.

Behind the curtain: We are on air thanks to the ANU’s Development Policy Centre.

Visual credits: Photo courtesy of Agora Food Studio.

  continue reading

9 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 291601261 series 2921516
Content provided by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Julia Bergin, Host: Gordon Peake, Sound design: Luther Canute, and Producer: Julia Bergin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Aid is a darned sight livelier than that that is described in the bloodless language of official records and reports. So what do chlorinated phrases in development like capacity building look like when done right? We begin in Dili, Timor Leste, at Agora Food Studio, a restaurant set up by two slightly world-weary aid workers who found that they could achieve more in setting up a place that celebrates East Timorese food and developing East Timorese chefs and restauranteurs than through all those reports that they'd previously been slaving over.

We hear from Alva Lim and Mark Notaras, the two architects of Agora, as well as the restaurant’s project manager Paula Torres. Paula’s parents, Petrolina Torres and Paulo Soares da Cruz can be heard speaking in Tetun throughout the podcast. We also talk to the author of a work-in-progress Tetun-English idiom dictionary, Anacleto Ribeiro, to learn why food is the perfect entrée into understanding Timor Leste, and an ideal model for thinking about development.

The full menu: Agora Food Studio/ Timor Leste Food Lab: Twitter | Website

Recommended reading: Much of the material we had to fillet out of the podcast has been condensed into a piece for the Development Policy Centre blog.

Behind the curtain: We are on air thanks to the ANU’s Development Policy Centre.

Visual credits: Photo courtesy of Agora Food Studio.

  continue reading

9 episodes

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