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E5: Who Are You in the Room, Identity vs Positionality, and Leadership in Times of Disruption

E5: Who Are You in the Room, Identity vs Positionality, and Leadership in Times of Disruption

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What does it mean to truly know who you are — and how you show up — in the spaces you occupy?In Episode 5 of The Sector Debrief, Kim Kucinskas, Thomas Jepson-Lay, and Ali Al Mokdad are joined by Aisha Tambajang, a humanitarian and development leader who has navigated identity, race, positionality, and belonging across The Gambia, Denmark, and the UK.The conversation moves between the deeply personal and the structurally urgent. Aisha Tambajang unpacks the difference between identity and positionality — what you carry versus where you stand in relation to power — and shares what it felt like to be seen as a Black woman in Denmark when she saw herself as Danish, and what it meant to return to The Gambia and occupy an entirely different position in the same system. Thomas Jepson-Lay reflects on ancestral guilt, the discomfort of transition, and what it means to leave the formal humanitarian system while still holding humanity as a core value. Kim Kucinskas builds on this with a sharp observation — that leaders who have never had to think about how they show up are now experiencing that discomfort for the first time, and it is jarring.Ali Al Mokdad brings reflections from Dubai, where leaders are responding to institutional shock not by rushing to survive, but by investing in values-based leadership and the kind of moral clarity the sector rarely prioritizes. Contrasted with Geneva, where too many conversations, he observes, are still starting from guidelines written for a world that no longer exists. As Ali Al Mokdad put it — "I feel like I spent my time at HQ level explaining HQ to the field, and the field to HQ." A tension that defines the sector, and one that this episode does not shy away from.Thomas Jepson-Lay captures the sharpest contrast of the episode in one line. There is a rush to fix. And there is a curiosity to solve. They are not the same thing. And which one you default to says everything about where you are standing, and who you think you are in the room.Honest thinking, shared without scripts, without talking points, and with reflections.Aisha Tambajang profile:https://www.linkedin.com/in/aisha-tambajang-81129b1b0/

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