
Does class matter?
Is class still a useful category for understanding capitalism and oppression? We discuss with Vivek Chibber on our podcast. Listen.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
Is class still a useful category for understanding capitalism and oppression? We discuss with Vivek Chibber on our podcast. Listen.
We can do more than tell young African girls to work hard in school. We need a real plan for the fully self-actualized people we want them to be.
On AIAC Radio, DJ Ripley aka Professor Larisa Mann, and talk about her new book “Rude Citizenship” on copyright and the colonial legacy in Jamaica.
South African discourse about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continually references Soviet support for the exiled ANC. But the past is more complicated than official Russian and South African statements suggest.
David Samaai was the first black (and coloured) South African to play at Wimbledon in 1949. He was 21 years old. He did so before the Americans, Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe.
How much work do we need to do to see our history and that of the African continent in all its complexity?
Since 1999, Nigeria’s academics have gone on strike 15 times. Since February, they’ve been on strike again. This week on the AIAC Podcast, we unpack why.
How digital capitalism, despite often being framed as potential growth engine, exploits the already marginalized and reproduces inequalities and power-relations between Africans.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has highlighted the narrowness of the crude anti-imperialist positions that are silent about the actual invasion of an independent country.
Voter apathy among young people in Kenya reveals fundamental flaws in Kenya’s democratic politics.
Fiston Mwanza Mujila’s debut novel is painted by the music of a nightclub in a fictional central African city-state. On this month’s AIAC Radio we imagined what it might sound like.
Russia’s war with Ukraine has inaugurated the new Cold War most feared, and some wanted. Which side are you on?
In Mozambique, a troubling pattern of land grabbing, pollution and death. This time at the hands of a Brazilian-owned coal mine.
Total is creating a social and economic disaster in Mozambique, consulting the same playbook it uses in Myanmar and Yemen where it extracts resources and silences communities.
With the globe-spanning rise of right-wing populism, there may be good reason to fear for South Africa’s fledgling democracy.
The 10th anniversary of the tragedy at Port Said passed without much notice in Egypt. Have Egyptians forgotten, or are they just trying to move on?