『Global Development Interrupted Podcast』のカバーアート

Global Development Interrupted Podcast

Global Development Interrupted Podcast

著者: The People the Work and What Was Lost When America Stepped Back
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Global Development Interrupted creates space for voices, perspectives, and critical reflection on global development. By amplifying the experiences of people who have built their careers in public service and global work, it invites learning, dialogue, and reimagining of what global development is, was, and could be.

globaldevinterrupted.substack.comPetit Media & Consulting LLC
政治・政府 政治学 社会科学
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  • The Name That Got It Killed
    2026/06/18

    A scholarship program training the next generation of democratic leaders was named “Diversity and Inclusion” specifically to hide it from a military dictatorship. On day nine of the Trump presidency, that name got it canceled.

    Matt Pietz spent a decade in Myanmar for USAID working on democracy and education projects. His last project gave 450 of the country’s most promising young people four-year scholarships — because a dictatorship that had spent decades keeping its population uneducated knew exactly what an educated citizen could do. One semester in, the White House called and said cancel it. No questions, no review, no interest in where the money actually went.

    In this episode, Matt breaks down what the work really was, who it served, and why Myanmar’s instability is America’s problem too — where the absence of rule of law has produced the world’s top supplier of heroin and meth, a haven for online scam centers, and a power vacuum that China is filling fast.

    This is what democracy promotion looks like from the inside. And what it looks like when it’s dismantled from the outside.

    Listen, Watch, Follow

    Listen & Watch on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Youtube

    Follow on: Instagram: @globaldevinterrupted | Facebook: Global Development Interrupted

    This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit globaldevinterrupted.substack.com/subscribe
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    34 分
  • We Are the Work
    2026/06/04

    Keisha Effiom sat at her dining room table in Rwanda, read the email about USAID’s final mission, and started writing. The result is a memoir — and this conversation.

    Keisha, former USAID Mission Director for Rwanda and Burundi, joins Global Development Interrupted to trace her journey from Howard University graduate to one of USAID’s top leaders and what she chose to do when it all came crashing down. She talks candidly about the human cost of USAID’s closure, why dismissing public servants with “just get over it” is not only wrong but cruel, and how she led her team through crisis without letting her heart go hard.

    She also shares the story behind her memoir, I Said My Peace With Peace: Inside USAID’s Final Days — a firsthand account of servant leadership when everything is falling apart.

    Whether you work in global development, care about U.S. foreign policy, or are leading people through uncertainty, this episode is for you.

    Want to learn more from Keisha and pick up her book, I Said My Piece with Peace? Visit her at keishaeffiom.com

    Listen, Watch, Follow

    Listen & Watch on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Youtube

    Follow on: Instagram: @globaldevinterrupted | Facebook: Global Development Interrupted

    This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit globaldevinterrupted.substack.com/subscribe
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    30 分
  • From USAID to the Ballot Box
    2026/05/21

    Three former USAID officers. Three Maryland races. One mission: keep serving.

    In this episode of Global Development Interrupted, host Leah Petit sits down with Alicia Contreras-Donello, running for Maryland House of Delegates District 14; Allison Eriksen, running for Montgomery County Council District 3; and Tracy Starr, running for US House of Representatives District 5.

    Together they share their stories of humble beginnings, careers defined by public service, and the moment they decided that the best way to keep serving was to change the system from the inside.

    From economic development and renewable energy to food security and human rights, these women are bringing the skills that USAID built — and the communities that shaped them — directly to the ballot box. If you believe that government should be representative of the people it serves, this episode is for you.

    Maryland early voting runs June 11th through 18th. Primary Election Day is June 23rd.

    This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    Interested in learning more about these candidates? Check them out below!

    Alicia Contreras-Donello - Maryland House of Delegates District 14

    📸 Instagram/TikTok: @aliciaformaryland 👍 Facebook/LinkedIn: Alicia for Maryland 🌐 Website: aliciacontrerasdonello.com

    Allison Eriksen - Montgomery County Council District 3

    📸 Instagram: @allisonformoco 🌐 Website: allisonformoco.com

    Tracy Starr - Maryland’s 5th District

    📸 Instagram: @tracyforcongress26 🌐 Website: friendsoftracy.com

    Stay connected with Global Development Interrupted

    Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Youtube

    Instagram: @globaldevinterrupted | Facebook: Global Development Interrupted



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit globaldevinterrupted.substack.com/subscribe
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    41 分
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