Kenyan writer and translator Wangui wa Goro
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Education University of Leicester; University of London; Middlesex University.
Occupation: Academic, social critic, researcher, translator and writer
Wangui wa Goro (born 1961) is a Kenyan academic, social critic, researcher, translator and writer based in the UK. As a public intellectual she has an interest in the development of African languages and literatures, as well as being consistently involved with the promotion of literary translation internationally, regularly speaking and writing on the subject..
Background and career
Professor Wangui wa Goro is a writer, translator, translation studies scholar and pioneer who has lived and lectured in different parts of the world including the UK, USA, Germany and South Africa.
NGMN Urges ICT Companies to Tackle Climate Change totaltele.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from totaltele.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Please join the Future of Diplomacy Project and the Project on Europe and the Transatlantic Relationship for a conversation with Lord Peter Ricketts, former Fisher Family Fellow (2018-19), UK Ambassador to France (2012-2016), and UK National Security Adviser (2010-2012), on his new book
Hard Choices: What Britain Does Next about the difficult decisions facing all Western countries - and Britain in particular - as they adapt to a more complex and fractured international order. Faculty Chair Nicholas Burns will moderate this discussion.Lord Peter Ricketts was a Fisher Family Fellow (in residence in April 2018) and a life peer in the House of Lords in the United Kingdom. Lord Peter has spent 40 years as a member of the Diplomatic Service. His final post was Ambassador in Paris (2012-2016). Before that he was the UK’s first National Security Adviser (2010-2012), and in that role was the coordinator of the 2010 National Security Strategy and Strategic Defence and Security Review.
PTI | New Delhi | Updated: 28-04-2021 15:12 IST | Created: 28-04-2021 15:12 IST
One in four people experience mild, short lived systemic side effects after receiving either the COVID-19 preventive by Pfizer or AstraZeneca vaccine known as Covishield in India with headache, fatigue and tenderness the most common symptoms, according to a study published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.
The researchers from King s CollegeLondon in the UK also found that most systemic side effects meaning side effects excluding where the injection took place peaked within the first 24 hours following vaccination and usually lasted 1-2 days.
The analysis of data from the ZOE COVID Symptom Study app found much fewer side effects in the general population with both the Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines than reported in trials.