About Ben
Ben Cashdan is a economist and television producer in South Africa. He was an economic advisor in the South African Presidency under President Nelson Mandela, focusing on capacity building and local economic development. Since 2000 Ben has served as executive producer of a number of television series on democracy and development for global broadcasters. In 2015 Ben co-founded ReCreate South Africa, a coalition of creators and users of copyrighted material in South Africa, working together for fair and balanced copyright reform and access to knowledge.
Ben has a masters degree in Social and Political Sciences from Kings College Cambridge and a Postgraduate Certificate in Economics from the London School of Economics. Ben also continued his postgraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland in the Department of Economic Geography. He was South African producer for Harry Belafonte’s biographical documentary Sing Your Song. Ben has also produced 4 episodes of The World Debate on BBC World News. He developed and produced the first season of South2North on Al Jazeera English, the first global talk show to be produced in Africa for a major global broadcaster. In December 2013 Cashdan produced an episode of BBC Question Time on South Africa after Mandela.
Ben has directed a number of broadcast media projects on democracy and development in partnership with agencies including the World Economic Forum, the United Nations Development Programme and the African Leadership Academy.
Articles by this Author
Public AI Launch, and Some Thoughts on Copyright
I attended the exciting launch of a series of papers and reflections on “Public AI” at the EU Parliament this...
Time for an IP Reset to Protect Health, Education, Creativity and Traditional Knowledge?
It’s time to put people back into the Intellectual Property system. Currently IP tends to reproduce inequality. IP should support...
Centre Launches with Top Thinkers; Video available.
At a packed event at the Geneva Graduate Institute on 3rd December 2025, the Centre on Knowledge Governance held its...
Centre publishes new analysis on broadcast, limitations and exceptions
This week our research team published a series of new reports. These relate to the work streams in the upcoming...
Centre Director Sean Flynn featured in ‘GLOBE’
Sean Flynn, Director of the Centre on Knowledge Governance was featured in GLOBE #36, the review of the Geneva Graduate...
Four new proposals for SCCR 47
The World Intellectual property Organization (WIPO) has published four new proposals on ways forward for some of its key work...
Case Studies of AI for Good and AI for Development
Today the Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance presents a series of Case Studies on AI for Good in Africa and...
The AI Remuneration Debate: Three Perspectives
The rapid development of generative AI has sparked intense debate over how, or even if, creators should be compensated when...
25 Sept 2025: Beyond Adoption: Why it Matters and What is Next for Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge
On 25 September, former Director of the Traditional Knowledge Division at the World Intellectual Property Organization Wend Wendland will deliver...
Tracking AI for Good in the Global South: Our TDM Case Studies are Online
The Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance has been researching cases of Computational Research (or Text and Data Mining) aimed at...
How will Gen-AI lawsuits Impact Copyright? We Help You Keep Track.
Are you trying to keep track of all the litigation by rights holders and creators against Generative AI companies? Litigation...
It is Official: The Centre will Launch between September and November 2025
It is official – the Centre on Knowledge Governance will be launching in the coming months. In September and October...
Ethical Sourcing of African Language Data: Lanafrica and the NOODL licence
Over 2,000 African languages are spoken by approximately 1.4 billion people on the continent, showing how linguistic diversity underpins African...
The Global Evolution of AI Fact-Checking: Copyright and Research Gaps
Abstract The propagation and evolution of AI-powered fact-checking tools worldwide has foregrounded the issue of access to quality training data....
A Talking Health Chatbot in African Languages: DSFSI, University of Pretoria
A project at the Data Sciences for Social Impact (DSFSI) group, University of Pretoria, led by Professor Vukosi Marivate, is...
Masakhane: Use of the JW300 Dataset for Natural Language Processing
The Masakhane Project showcases the transformative power of open, collaborative efforts in advancing natural language processing (NLP) for African languages....
Promoting AI for Good in the Global South – Highlights
Across Africa and Latin America, researchers are using Artificial Intelligence to solve pressing problems: from addressing health challenges and increasing...
The NOODL license: Licensing African datasets to support research and AI in the Global South
With the increasing prominence of AI in all sectors of our economy and society, access to training data has become...




