
Children’s Books African Kids Could Relate To
While visiting relatives in Nigeria, I found a children’s bookshop in Lagos with no African children or African languages in their books. That day changed everything.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

While visiting relatives in Nigeria, I found a children’s bookshop in Lagos with no African children or African languages in their books. That day changed everything.

Will popular resistance against the one-party rule of President Blaise Compaore in Burkina Faso succeed?

Social justice tours are tours which take the tourist through low income, economically depressed or working class neighborhoods.

What role should media play in the midst of controversial cultural expressions, like songs that address racist violence by white farmers against their workers in South Africa?

Why is the conversation in New York about what the government will do about an epidemic, while for West Africa many look instinctively to NGOs?

Many Brazilian voters are so disillusioned with politics that in this traditionally left-leaning, post-right military dictatorship society, the right has made surprising gains in this election.

Rejecting how African products are marketed to Westerners.

A Cape Town hip hop group causes a huge stir with its music video “Larney Jou Poes” (roughly translated: Boss, your cunt.) depicting an uprising by farmworkers.

The youthful and creative art scene in Senegal’s capital is the subject of director Sandra Krampelhuber’s documentary film, “100% Dakar.”

Zambia – the country its young people fondly call “Zed” – turns 50 in 2014. It was part of the first wave of African countries to gain independence in the 1960s.

A fateful meeting with Mazrui, the famed Kenyan historian and broadcaster.

The country’s first School of Etiquette situated in one of Johannesburg’s rich northern suburbs is more evidence of how much its public culture has slid to the right.

Uhuru Kenyatta went to The Hague to defend himself against charges of war crimes. He’s always managed to stay one step ahead of the Court.

While health professionals are crucial frontline responders, the Ebola crisis is indeed too important to be left to medical personnel.

A historian of Ghana, Ivor Wilks was crucial to the founding of African history as an academic discipline in the late 1950s and to its development over subsequent decades.

Is it coincidental that nation-states just emerging from brutal civil wars cannot cope with Ebola because of their broken institutions?