
The decline of Liberia in black internationalism
Historically, Liberia ignited the imagination of black people across the globe. Then it stopped. What happened, and can it be reversed?
6304 Articles by:
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
Historically, Liberia ignited the imagination of black people across the globe. Then it stopped. What happened, and can it be reversed?
Facebook and its “family” of services are a one-way street towards greater integration, data exploitation, and erosions of privacy by an increasingly monopolistic company.
Anyone who lives in fear of getting sick exists in a state of unfreedom.
Today’s social movements rely on tech collectives to organize safely. But few know the history of other technologies used by earlier liberation movements.
Why is Nairobi’s government terrorizing hawkers and hustlers around the city? An anthropological perspective.
Has the recent death of Tanzania’s president John Magufuli created new political possibilities?
AIAC Talk this week: the historical entanglement of South African football with English football, and what that tells us about politics and sport. Watch it on our YouTube channel.
In this interview with Rasna Warah, journalist Michela Wrong debunks the myth of Rwanda as a model developmental state and a poster child for Western aid.
African states are involved in the War on Terror more than we think. They’re surrounded by an eco-system of the war industry.
An encounter on a Cape Town bus forces the writer to think about religion, especially Christianity, and queerness.
An interview with Brian Peterson, author of a new biography of Thomas Sankara. Peterson positions 1980s Burkina Faso as counterhegemonic to the neoliberal transition then.
In the first video from a series for the Capitalism In My City project, Brian Mathenge decodes what everyday capitalism looks like from the margins of Nairobi.
Why are South African government policies benefiting black mothers still controversial?
The film “Finding Sally” grapples with Ethiopia’s past, but may romanticize its present.
How is Kenya’s “new middle class” contributing to a pervasive low-quality oppression that leaves Kenyans feeling hopeless?
This week on AIAC Talk, we’re debating whether the moment is right for South Africa’s left to form a new party. Watch it live on YouTube.