º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

David Olusoga to kickstart Black History Month at University of Exeter Business School

The series of talks will include a discussion on diversity and inclusion in business

TV historian David Olusoga.(Image: Uplands Television)

TV historian David Olusoga is set to kickstart University of Exeter Business School’s programme of events and talks to mark Black History Month, which begins today (October 1).

Mr Olusoga, who is based in Bristol, is known for presenting factual series and documentaries including the BBC series A House Through Time and Black and British: A Forgotten History.

The co-founder of production company Uplands Television will give a talk on Wednesday (October 6) at the South West institution entitled ‘Black British Contributions’, which will focus on what it means to be black and British today, and look at the challenges the black community has faced and the contributions it has made to British society.

The event will start a series of free online lectures from prominent black historians and cultural figures at the business school, co-hosted by the university’s African and Caribbean Society.

Dr Angelina Osborne, an independent researcher and co-author of the book 100 Great Black Britons , will explore the African and Caribbean presence in the South West of England and wider º£½ÇÊÓÆµ from the Roman era to the present on October 13.

Dr Osborne said: “People of African heritage have played a significant role in Britain's history long before the Windrush docked in Tilbury in 1948, and yet when people talk about British history, they often neglect this important fact. Similarly, when people talk about Black history, they neglect Britain.”

The programme will finish on October 27 with a talk by Katie Donovan-Adekanmbi, an inclusion and cohesion specialist whose work focuses on embedding the values of diversity and equality into businesses.