
How the left can rescue Nigeria
The last 20 years of liberal democracy in Nigeria have been marred by crises. The next election should be the Left’s target.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
The last 20 years of liberal democracy in Nigeria have been marred by crises. The next election should be the Left’s target.
Binyavanga’s fashion sensibility as well as his choices in his memoir, and his essays, will have a lasting impact after he is gone.
Dedicated to the memory of the writer’s friend: the rebel and genius, Binyavanga Wainaina.
Binyavanga Wainaina was a writer who not only produced seminal work, but also contributed to and shaped the African literary tradition into what it is today.
The strategies of Israel’s South African supporters to fight BDS on the country’s university campuses.
The charge that Mohandas Gandhi was a racist is doing the rounds again. His stay in colonial South Africa fuels those claims.
South African politics urgently needs an injection of electoral energy from the left, that speaks in a language that resonates with voters, rejects chauvinism and embraces democracy.
Are postapartheid norms against open homophobia in party politics eroding in South Africa?
The film ‘The Sound of Masks’ explores dance, memory and the meaning of life, ancestry, culture and political struggle in postcolonial Mozambique.
In post al-Bashir Sudan, new paradigms animate political action, while old ones have returned. Towards what sort of future might the protesters march?
Ending the capitalist war against nature begins with eco-socialist perspectives and actions.
A response to Panashe Chigumadzi’s essay, “Why I’m No Longer Talking To Nigerians About Race.”
Director Dare Olaitan’s Knock Out Blessing (2018), is nothing less than a meditation on rape culture.
Lasting peace in Sudan’s Darfur region – 300,000 people dead and millions displaced by regime violence – should be a priority for #SudanUprising.
When Ugandan police imprisoned Bobi Wine in his own home, the singer-turned-lawmaker used the internet, music and multiple languages to craft a call for solidarity between civilians and security forces.
The Tanzania government’s brand of heavy-handed state intervention risks fueling skepticism about the role of the state in development.