
6264 Articles by:
Miguna Miguna
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.


Malians educating Malians
SOS Democracy wants to raise voter turnout, educate them on their choices and hold the candidates and government accountable to voters.

Liberian Independence, Staten Island Style

What’s wrong with the Germans?
German reality shows that travel to Africa have the feel of colonial era ethnographic films in how they perpetuate the image of the ‘primitive other’

Hassan Khan and his 6 minute film “Jewel”

What is the new image of Africa?
“Africa is finally seizing control of its image” goes the mantra. But which Africa and which image?

National Geographic explores Zimbabwe’s pre-election pulse

The Bicycle Thief
A new Israeli law orders asylum-seekers to be detained for an unlimited period without judicial oversight or criminal proceedings, even for misdemeanors like bicycle or cell-phone theft.

Sympathy for the ‘Devil’
A New York Times article that’s respectful and mostly accurate, including the use of terminology, when covering African Traditional Religion.

Restaging the Death of Patrice Lumumba
The merits of restaging ‘Une Saison au Congo,’ Aimé Césaire’s history of the life and death of Patrice Lumumba, in London, starring Chiwetel Ejiofor.
What does Tony Blair want from Malawi?

This Film Has Been Banned
The South African feature film, “Of Good Report,” deals with the relationship of a teacher with his underage student. The local censors decided it is a crime to screen it.
Weekend Music Break 46

The Making of Hashim Amla
Hashim Amla’s appearances on the cricket pitch and its meaning, reflects similarly on South Africa’s own, ongoing, liberation struggle.

On the Pain of Violent Men

The New Yorker Goes to Mali
I do know a bit about Mali, but I hardly recognize The New Yorker’s Jon Lee Anderson’s version of it.