Santilla Chingaipe

is a historian and filmmaker.

By this author


Comment July 19, 2025

The end of seriousness

“Back in February, a meeting that resembled a Real Housewives reunion was being dissected, analysed and broadcast around the world. ‘This is going to be great television, I will say that,’ United States President Donald Trump announced to the …”

Culture July 09, 2025

Musician Lisa Simone

Lisa Simone has long stepped out of the shadow of her famous mother, Nina Simone, but keeps her promise to continue her heritage.

News March 01, 2025

The killing of Natan Mwanza

The stabbing death of a young Melbourne model has sent shock waves through African diasporic communities in Australia, highlighting the way Black lives are treated in the media and Black grief is rendered invisible.

Culture February 08, 2025

Journalist and documentary-maker Shiori Itō

The Oscar-nominated documentary Black Box Diaries, by Japanese journalist Shiori Itō, is a first-person account of her quest for justice.

Life November 23, 2024

Overlooking race and gender in dementia studies

Despite almost half a million Australians living with dementia, and that number predicted to double by mid century, public health experts still lack data on how race and gender relate to the disease and a framework for early intervention.

Culture November 23, 2024

Artist Julie Mehretu

A major retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art features the astonishing work of Julie Mehretu – one of the world’s most acclaimed artists – in her first solo show in Australia.

podcast November 07, 2024

Santilla Chingaipe is Rewriting History

Michael is joined in studio by filmmaker, historian and author Santilla Chingaipe to discuss her new book Black Convicts.

Comment November 02, 2024

Waking the ghosts of ancestors

“I remember when they moved in. It was shortly after I’d given up my workspace in State Library Victoria and had relocated indefinitely to writing from my home. These were the first days of the pandemic and perhaps the isolation facilitated the listening. …”

News July 27, 2024

The fight ahead for a Harris presidency

If Kamala Harris is to become president of the United States, she will do so by galvanising the Democrats’ most loyal source of support – Black women.

Culture May 04, 2024

Author Bryan Washington

Rising American literary star Bryan Washington – appearing at the Melbourne Writers Festival this month – is lauded for his nuanced portrayals of complex characters.

Culture April 06, 2024

Film director Ava DuVernay

The acclaimed Black American director Ava DuVernay has made a career of firsts – but she had to create her own ways into the film industry to do it.

Culture February 21, 2024

The exclusionary empowerment of Taylor Swift

The success and scale of Taylor Swift’s Australian tour reflects the country’s unresolved relationship with class, gender and race.

Culture November 18, 2023

Singer Marcia Hines

Marcia Hines’s new album – the latest reinvention in her long and distinguished career – returns to the songs of her childhood.

news August 19, 2023

Musician Wynton Marsalis

For the garlanded trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, music is how we learn to be human – and he’s in Australia to share his love for its rich traditions.

Culture April 22, 2023

Musical theatre performer Ruvarashe Ngwenya

Ruvarashe Ngwenya’s journey to the leading role in Tina: The Tina Turner Musical has been about learning to advocate for herself.

Life February 18, 2023

Black Rhinos teams lift a community

A club that began as a grassroots crime prevention program has ended up a dominant force in the Melbourne Metropolitan Basketball League – and athletic organisations, academics and government are taking note.

News August 20, 2022

The rise of far-right Hindu nationalism in Australia

Far-right Indian nationalism is spilling into Australia, with sections of the Indian diaspora responsible for hate crimes against Sikhs and Muslims. Political leaders are being asked to be more aware of the danger.

News February 05, 2022

Class action planned over ‘character’ test for deportations

Under sections 501 and 116 of the Migration Act, visas can be cancelled or refused under a broad ‘character test’. This legislation is being used to detain and deport immigrants, and is the subject of a proposed class action against the Australian government for alleged human rights breaches.

News December 11, 2021

Who are the people failing Australia’s visa ‘character test’?

Under the amended section 501 of the Migration Act, the federal government has the power to cancel or refuse visas and deport people who fail a ‘character test’ – even those who assumed they were Australian citizens.

Culture November 20, 2021

Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth

How does one objectively review a master’s first novel in nearly half a century? In my case, it proved to be an impossible task. There’s been much hype surrounding Wole Soyinka’s Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth, …

News September 11, 2021

The mental health crisis facing young Australians

Despite government promises to increase funding during the pandemic, Australian experts are identifying a mental health emergency for young people.

News July 03, 2021

What really happened in the tower lockdowns

One year ago, nine public housing towers in Melbourne were locked down as a second wave of Covid-19 loomed. An investigation by the Victorian ombudsman has found the government’s directive went against advice from public health officials.

Culture June 12, 2021

The Underground Railroad

Moonlight director Barry Jenkins’ television adaptation of The Underground Railroad is a brilliant and deeply moving depiction of slavery in America.

News April 24, 2021

Refugees handcuffed, moved again

Asylum seekers held in a Brisbane hotel have been transferred to Melbourne without warning, while others are being arbitrarily released into the community. Advocates argue immigration detention is out of control.

News December 12, 2020

Australians stranded in Ethiopia

Australians are desperate to be repatriated from Ethiopia as armed conflict between the government and separatists escalates in the country’s Tigray province, cutting off access to basic supplies, transport and the internet.

News August 22, 2020

Student nurses struggling to graduate

With the health system already under pressure, nursing students warn of a shortfall in graduates next year as Covid-19 hinders their ability to officially complete their placements and other course requirements.

News July 18, 2020

Tower residents’ virus warnings unheeded

While residents of Melbourne’s public housing towers were given no notice of an impending hard lockdown, concerns raised earlier to the DHHS and department of Housing about the threat posed by Covid-19 to those families were largely ignored.

News July 11, 2020

Five days inside the Melbourne nine block lockdowns

Residents in the public housing towers had no warning they would face some of the world’s toughest restrictions, as the state undertook a Covid-19 testing blitz.

News June 13, 2020

Law enforcement and racial profiling

As debate over police accountability reaches boiling point, research finds ‘risk-based’ approaches to law enforcement, known for targeting racial minorities, are in use in Australia.

News January 25, 2020

Migrants and aged care

As the aged-care royal commission rolls on, community groups fear that the welfare of elderly migrants who do not speak English is being forgotten.

News November 09, 2019

Reporting racism

A new study highlighting systemic racism in the Australian media has called for stronger guidelines to regulate against both overt and covert prejudice.

Portrait September 28, 2019

Rapper and hip-hop artist GoldLink

A call to GoldLink, one of the rising stars of hip-hop, and a man looking to unite disparate communities with his new album, Diaspora.

News July 27, 2019

Farm activists face tougher laws

As federal and state governments impose tougher laws to deter animal activists from trespassing on farms, there is growing concern that journalists and whistleblowers will be unable to report on unethical farming practices.

News June 01, 2019

The homelessness crisis

Discussions about housing affordability have frequently omitted those who are most severely affected by the crisis: people experiencing homelessness. Advocates in the homelessness sector are calling on the government to act.

News April 13, 2019

Delays in citizenship applications

Under the Coalition government, the processing of citizenship paperwork has increased to often upwards of 300 days, causing a huge backlog of applications and infuriating refugee groups.

News March 09, 2019

Action plan on stillbirths

The federal government is preparing an action plan after a senate inquiry found stillbirths are occurring disproportionately among Indigenous and migrant women.

News November 03, 2018

Detained South Sudanese future unclear

The fate of a group of South Sudanese men awaiting deportation from detention on Christmas Island is unknown, after the closure of the island’s detention centre.

News June 30, 2018

Indigenous players and the AFL

Five years ago guidelines were established to help Indigenous AFL recruits throughout their careers. But with little being done, a group of ex-players has now decided to turn words into actions.

News March 31, 2018

Dutton uses visas as second criminal sentence

A South Sudanese man who grew up in Australia awaits deportation from Christmas Island, as Peter Dutton uses ministerial powers to punish refugee members of ‘Apex’.

News February 03, 2018

Skills recognition for refugees

For skilled professionals forced to flee countries such as Syria, the challenges they face getting their qualifications certified in Australia harm the wider community as much as they harm them.

Life September 01, 2017

Héritier Lumumba’s ‘Fair Game’

A new documentary on footballer Héritier Lumumba calls out systemic racism in the AFL but also holds a mirror up to endemic problems in Australian society.

Comment July 29, 2017

Opinion journalism and clickbait

“Uhlmann made some strong statements on his personal position on North Korea’s missile testing and his view of how that should have been handled, as well as his views on Russia and China’s recent actions. It raised questions about a journalist’s …”

News June 24, 2017

Migrant language service budget cuts

Federal budget changes to a program that teaches new Australians language skills are, according to the Adult Migrant English Service, prioritising cost savings above social integration.

News May 20, 2017

Australian missing in South Sudan

The sister of a young man who vanished on a family holiday to South Sudan believes her brother was kidnapped by rebel soldiers. Why then, she asks, is DFAT doing nothing to find him?

Life April 28, 2017

Hair and social inclusivity

For a society to be progressive and inclusive, cultural differences must be accepted and celebrated. And that includes hair.

News February 25, 2017

Race, stereotyping and Melbourne’s Apex gang

The media’s reporting of gang crime across Melbourne has racial overtones, singling out Sudanese Australians and engendering fear and stereotyping in the community.