
Defend Puerto Rico
This weekend’s music break is dedicated to the isla del encancto.
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Marjorie Namara Rugunda is a writer, researcher, and PhD student at the University of British Columbia.

This weekend’s music break is dedicated to the isla del encancto.

The Nobel Prize for Literature buzz around Ngugi’s wa Tiong’o’s points to both his seminal contributions to African literature but also his work to kept the memory of Kenya’s divisive past alive.

Pragmatism dictates how many young Tanzanians view a Chinese education: A Chinese education was seen as a logical pathway to securing well-paying reliable employment.

Reading three contemporary South African women authors: Lindiwe Hani, Pumla Gqola and Redi Tlhabi.

What characterizes daily life in Kenya: a seemingly simultaneous flagrant zest for life and hesitant fascination with death.

The dominant approach to revitalizing national parks is one-dimensional and sees local residents as obstacles rather than partners.

For those not familiar with academic publishing, prominent peer-reviewed journals are not expected to publish garbage promoting colonialism.

Nigerian filmmakers are embracing the short form as more than just a cinematic calling card.

As the commodity super-cycle’s denouement now makes obvious the need for change, at least it is clear to all that Africans are not lying down.


Protests against Togo’s ruling family aren’t unusual, but this time there’s a few unusual components, including that the protesters have a clear platform of demands.

Daniel arap Moi perfected rigging and state violence as politics. Uhuru Kenyatta campaigned with them and will extend and complete them in his second term.

The depressing new norm for one of the most vibrant grassroots, immigrant cultural traditions in New York City.


Anthropologist Johnny Miller’s aerial photographs chronicles geographic stratifications in South Africa and beyond.

Cubans are far better prepared than most for public health and climate emergencies. African countries should emulate the island nation in this regard.

An edited version of this post appeared in the South African newspaper, City Press, as part of “Thought We Had Something Going,” an e-anthology exploring post-1994 experiences.

That the recent revolutions failed to transcend political stagnation, is a product of the way neoliberalism functions as an ideology.

Angola is Exhibit 1,000,003 on how and why the West judge some elections “free and fair,” and others not.

In his life and books, Alex La Guma struggled for a society in which all people could find their humanity, argues his friend Ngugi wa Thiong’o.