Madubuko A. Robinson Diakité (LL.B., Fil.Kand., M. A., ADB, LL.M. and Juris Licentiate) is a US-born human rights lawyer and documentary filmmaker currently residing in Sweden. He has traveled widely throughout Africa and currently free-lances as a guest lecturer and consultant on African migration, the African diaspora, human rights law, film history and mass media. In 1973, Diakité won an Honorable Mention prize for a film on youth in Harlem at the Grenoble Festival of Short films (For Personal Reasons, co-produced with SvT 2, Malmö).
Diakité was born in New York City. Following his parents' divorce, his mother married a journalist from Nigeria, and he and his three siblings spent most of their teenage years there. Encouraged by his stepfather's important role in the struggle for independence from Britain, Diakité developed his own interests in journalism and human rights. Upon returning to New York City in the 60’s he earned a law degree.
Inspired by documentary filmmakers in New York at the time, he earned a diploma in documentary filmmaking at the New York Institute of Photography under George Wallach. He arrived in Sweden as a foreign student in 1968 and earned a Swedish B. A. (Fil. Kand.) and an M.A. in film at the Department of Film Studies, (1972-3) under the guidance of Professor Rune Waldekranz, its founder. After completing studies for a Ph.D. in film history (ABD) at Stockholm University he published the draft of his dissertation as a book entitled A Piece of The Glory: A Survey of African American Filmmakers and Their Struggles with Popular American Myths.
After yet another stay in Nigeria, where he established the film unit at the Centre for Nigerian Cultural Studies, Ahmadu Bello University (Michael Crowder, Director) he settled in southern Sweden.
In 1992, he earned an LL.M. at the Faculty of Law, Lund University, and a Juris Licentiat in 2007, both under the supervision of Professor Göran Melander. His current research at the renowned Raoul Wallenberg Institute in Lund, Sweden, examines human rights and migrant workers in Africa.