#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

Released Monday, 11th August 2025
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#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

#162. How Developed Countries Perpetuate Their Economic Power (and the Obstacles to Joining Their Ranks)

Monday, 11th August 2025
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Remi Adekoya is a political science lecturer at the University of York in the UK, focusing on national and sub-national identities and their role in international relations, especially as they affect Africa. Before joining academia, Remi was a journalist, whose writing appeared in major mainstream publications in Europe, the U.S. and Africa. He has also provided analysis and commentary for wide-ranging international media and is the host of the podcast How to Become a Leader in Africa. Remi’s cultural background – as the son of a Nigerian father and a Polish mother, growing up in Nigeria and living as an adult in Warsaw and now London – give him multifaceted, first hand, international perspectives. Today’s interview will focus on his book, published in 2023: It’s Not About Whiteness, It’s About Wealth: How the Economics of Race Really Work.

Recorded 7/29/25.

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From The Podcast

Knowledge-seeker and psychologist Stuart Kelter shares his joy of learning and “delving in.” Ready? Let’s delve...Join Chris Churchill on the possible reasons why the search for intelligent life in the universe is coming up empty.Let’s hear from Israeli psychiatrist Pesach Lichtenberg about a promising approach to schizophrenia—going mainstream in Israel—that uses minimal drugs and maximal support through the crisis, rejecting the presumption of life-long disability.Find out what Pulitzer Prize winning historian, David Kertzer learned from recently opened Vatican records about Pius XII, the Pope During WWII.We explore the fascinating and intriguing...What did journalist Eve Fairbanks learn about race relations in post-Apartheid South Africa?Did you realize there were dozens and dozens of early women scientists? Let’s find out about them through a sampling of poems with poet Jessy Randall.How shall we grapple with the complexities of the placebo effect in drug development and medical practice? Harvard researcher Kathryn Hall confirms just how complicated it really is!But beware: increasing one’s knowledge leads to more and more questions. If that appeals to you, join us on “Delving In”!The interviews of the Delving In podcast were first broadcast on KTAL-LP, the community radio station of Las Cruces, New Mexico. The full archive of well over 100 interviews can be found athttps://www.lccommunityradio.org/archives/category/delving-in.Please send questions and comments to stuartkelter@protonmail.com.

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