Feb 27, 2019
After spending 10 years in refugee camps in Central Africa,
Christopher Zambakari and his family arrived to the U.S. No war or
any other obstacle -like not getting a job immediately after
graduation- stopped him to becoming a successful academic,
practitioner and business owner with degrees in Law, MBA and a PhD.
Learn about “The Lit Review Method” for changing the world and
becoming a successful social change professional in Episode
2 of Season 4.
Episode 2 of Season 4 is brought to you by
The Rotary Peace
Fellowship and the Graduate Program in
Conflict Resolution and Coexistence at the Heller School for Social
Policy at Brandeis University.
In this episode we discuss:
- On how the Sudanese civil war, influenced Dr. Zambakari
- Born in South Sudan (before partition) first he was IDP
(internally displaced) to Central Africa Republic spent over a
decade in refugee camps
- Most of what he does professionally is informed by his
experience as a refugee and address the issues and causes of
conflict.
- On how Dr. Zambakari’s support system (two sisters and a mum)
was key to propel his career forward
- On how mum made sure they had a good support system, she
arranged teachers and bartered mid-wife services in exchange for
education
- By the time they arrived to Phoenix, the children spoke Arabic,
French and English, all thanks to mum
- Mum worked 16 hours a day and two jobs and strongly pushed the
kids to get an education
- How the outside (was chaos, wars) but the household was stable
and produced an environment that encouraged education
- On how he funded his education and college and attended Grand
Canyon University and how he transferred to ASU and he graduated
with a BS in Psychology
- Zambakari’s grad school experience
- On being multi-lingual and his passion for Spanish and Spanish
Literature
- How has he integrated his career while making a living
- Zambakari’s “why” and how we transformed his upbringing (in a
conflict zone) and propelled him to a successful career
- On why he took student loans
- What happened to him after two years of trying and NOT finding
a job
- Zambakari’s Darfur advocacy work
- The many organizations that Dr. Zambakari helped initiated and
what lessons he got from there and how he propelled his career from
here on now
- Zambakari’s experience advising students on their careers and
his personal career tips
- Differentiate between your talent and your
calling
- How he started a business in assisting living that allowed him
to fund his non-profit ventures
- Zambakari’s Rotary Peace
Fellowship and how he started his own global
consulting firm afterwards
- How he build Zambakari’s Advisory (ZA) and
how his research got ranked one of the most influential in the
world.
- How he plans on training the next generation of researchers
FROM Africa
- How to get in touch with the ZACF (as an intern, fellow)
- How to publish your research at ZACF
- Zambakari’s top skill for a social change
professional to succeed
- Journals or Blogs? What is best for a social change
career?
- Zambakari’s lesson’s for those that have to start their own
business
- Final words for life and career from Dr. Zambakari
Links:
Arizona State
University
University
Community Partnership for Action Research
The Nile Institute for Peace
and Development
Zambakari’s
Advisory
Social Science Research
Network
Dr. Zambakari’s
email
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This episode was brought thanks to the Rotary Peace Center and
Brandeis University:
Are you an existing or emerging peace leader looking to take
your career to the next level? You might be eligible to receive
full funding to pursue a MA or professional certificate in peace &
conflict studies. Learn more about Rotary Peace Fellowships at
www.rotary.org/peace-fellowships
The MA in Conflict
Resolution and Coexistence at Brandeis
university , where you gain the practical,
hands on skills you need to become a peacebuilding professional in
the U.S. and abroad.