26/3: The Shadow Scholars – movie screening and discussion with Anna Libánská (CAFR FF UK)

On Thursday, March 26, at 6 p.m., as part of the One World Festival in Pardubice, Divadlo 29 will host a screening of the film “The Shadow Scholars.” The screening will be followed by a discussion featuring Anna Libánská, a member of CAFR.

From Tribeca festival website:

Patricia Kingori, the youngest Black woman professor in Oxford’s 925-year history, embarks on a revealing investigation into Kenya’s hidden essay mills — an industry where an estimated 40,000 highly educated yet underemployed Kenyans make ends meet by writing academic papers for wealthy Western students. The documentary follows individuals like Mercy, a single mother striving to support her daughter as she writes thousands of words each night to help privileged students graduate and secure lucrative jobs. Meanwhile, in the United States, a desperate student sells explicit photos to pay for the promise of passing grades on her midterm exams. As the industry faces increasing pressure from U.K. and Australian crackdowns and the rising threat of AI, Kingori explores the profound implications for global education.

Director Eloise King crafts an unflinching examination of educational inequality filmed across three continents, revealing how this underground academic economy supports success in the Global North while simultaneously exploiting talent in the Global South. The film’s haunting visual approach, including AI-masked interviews that protect identities while emphasizing the human cost, creates a compelling aesthetic that complements its urgent message. Beyond exposing academic fraud, The Shadow Scholars forces viewers to confront uncomfortable questions about the true value of education in our increasingly unequal world. For audiences concerned with global justice, educational integrity and the ethics of AI, this eye-opening documentary provides crucial insight into a crisis threatening the foundation of higher education while illuminating the human stories behind the statistics.—Jarod Neece