
The new Old Man in Zimbabwe
From the perspective of the past, there is little evidence to invest much hope in the “successful transition” trope still reverberating in the international media about Zimbabwe.
6397 Article(s) by:
Marjorie Namara Rugunda is a writer, researcher, and PhD student at the University of British Columbia.

From the perspective of the past, there is little evidence to invest much hope in the “successful transition” trope still reverberating in the international media about Zimbabwe.

Ten post-independence, pre-coup struggle songs that critiqued ZANU-PF under Mugabe and imagined a leadership change and different political culture.

Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s perturbing review of Maya Jasanoff’s travelogue of going up the Congo River as she’s accompanied by Joseph Conrad’s novel, ‘Heart of Darkness.”

What has Angola’s President João Lourenço, dubbed the “implacable exonerator,” been up to?

Biya did not conceive the system by which he rules Cameroon, but deserves as much credit for the modifications that have enabled his reign.

In the four decades that Robert Mugabe was at the helm of power in post-colonial Zimbabwe, his rule was anything but admirable.

This is no revolution—just an internal ZANU-PF matter. One-party rule and military control remain intact; the military and party leadership are effectively one and the same.

In Southern Africa, former liberation movements reclaim ownership over history and society not by seeking but by remaining in power.

And, the terrible experience of Tanzanian women in Oman and the United African Emirates.

Interview with Emmanuel Iduma, co-founder of Saraba magazine.


How did wildlife in Africa survive for millennia in together with people who never earned anything from it?



The Paradise Papers are shedding light on the mechanics of how African leaders hide their incomes.

A conversation on books, borders, and belonging with Somali-American writer, Abdul Adan.

Who produced that $30 mug you bought at Cape Town International Airport on your way home?

There’s no agreement, but the vibrant discussions and interventions by African scholars give much hope that something new is fermenting in African Studies.


Many white South Africans are doing all they can to maintain racial inequalities and white privilege. It’s a recipe for disaster. Hopefully they get it before it’s too late.