
6275 Articles by:
Miguna Miguna
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.


The BBC gets Rwanda wrong
It is a lot to ask the world to accept the multiple truths of Rwanda and it was too much for the film to explain this picture in all of its complicated nuance and actually share with us what remains untold about Rwanda’s story.

Sweden’s love affair with Pippi Longstocking and “definitions” of racism

Remembering Mandela and Other Weekend Specials
Weekend Special is all that stuff we wanted to, but did not get around to writing about or just shared on social media.

Remembering Slavery in South Africa
People forget that for 176 years, racial slavery was the central institution in a large part of the territories that would come to form South Africa.

Racial Degeneracy and Cowardice
The failure of Americans to have a concerted conversation on racism is not surprising. Too much is at stake for too many people, interests and institutions.

The Latin American Idol
How a Mexican show helped to construct a patchy and ill-defined “Latin American” identity.

Mohamed so-and-so from such-and-such
Ridley Scott’s “Exodus” and deeply rooted issues of bigotry and racism in Hollywood.

Lessons for black South Africa in black America
Many middle-class black South Africans hold poor and working-class blacks in disregard if not disdain, and believe poor blacks hold themselves back.

The African Sources of Knowledge Digital Library
Organized at Harvard University, this digital library contains rare handwritten and out-of-print African language documents of non-latinate scripts.

The history of Nigeria’s 1990s democracy movement
What has been the personal legacy and costs to the Abiola women in Nigeria’s struggle for democracy.

Visual Artist Anthony Bila’s Black History March

The University as a Place to Think
How we harness knowledge to the ethical injunctions we uphold against marginality, pain or suffering, on a global scale.

5 Questions for a Filmmaker–Teddy Goitom

Remembering Differently
Slavery, despite its centrality to South Africa’s founding, remains on the periphery of popular and institutional memory there.

Between polarization and transition
Brazil, under the Workers’ Party, even if it’s still struggling with enormous poverty and social inequality, has managed to improve tremendously.