
The Fighters
In the Economic Freedom Fighters, power is centralized in Julius Malema’s leadership. How that plays out, will affect the EFF’s future trajectory.
6279 Articles by:
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
In the Economic Freedom Fighters, power is centralized in Julius Malema’s leadership. How that plays out, will affect the EFF’s future trajectory.
Ellen DeGeneres wanted an African story. Achieng Agutu obliged. Don’t hate the player, though, hate the game.
Racist, anti-black stereotypes persist in Arabic literature. It reveals a racial anxiety and othering of Africa among celebrated Arab authors.
The physical and psychic ruins of colonial mining practice in a small town in Liberia.
The African Continental Free Trade Area and alternatives to neoliberalism.
At the heart of the protest movement in Sudan is a trade union. Proving again that democratic influence and change require collective participation and organization.
Labour challenges in Ethiopia’s industrialization.
On the eve of Baaba Maal’s first New York City concert in 8 years, Oumar Ba interviews him, asking about protest movements, the music business and Senegal.
In Angola, the poor are not entitled to full citizenship rights. They also are the base of resistance to the regime.
An overview of some of the problems and opportunities that the reopening of Belgium’s infamous AfricaMuseum brings.
While Nigeria’s class divide is not between rich whites and poor blacks, it still has a lot in common with postapartheid South Africa.
A good time to bring back this piece—first written in 2002—on the power of song to fuel political struggle.
There is a lively, angry, often chaotic debate about the role and place of the father of the South African nation.
The outcome of the Algerian revolution should not be pre-determined by a (neo)liberal Euro-American global order. Listen to the people.
Poor reading scores among South African children highlights the need for decolonization in book publishing, teaching and policy implementation.
Media coverage of rhino poaching in Southern Africa not only fails to address white control over conservation, but also reinforces it.