
When Americans took a global health crisis seriously
Recalling its Ebola hysteria would help the US better confront COVID-19.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
Recalling its Ebola hysteria would help the US better confront COVID-19.
In 1969, the OAU proposed its own refugee convention to reflect African values. Why did it not become policy across the continent?
In the shadow of the US election, this Tuesday on AIAC Talk, we talk African immigration to the United States with Abraham Zere and Aya Saed.
Any talk about green transition and sustainability must not become a façade for neocolonial schemes of plunder and domination.
At the largest gathering of black people he had ever seen together in Amsterdam, the author, originally from Kenya, wonder why they knew so little of each other.
What could or should full decolonization in Kenya look like?
The recent election has led to violence and general pandemonium. An explosion of independent journalism offers hope.
Nkrumah, Nyerere and Senghor were acutely aware of the need to displace the epistemic conditions of colonization in order to transcend it.
The risk of obesity increases with socioeconomic status in several African countries, unlike in their European counterparts with comparable income levels.
Les études littéraires africaines devraient donner plus d’espace aux nombreux écrivains vivant sur le continent, dans les langues africaines.
Senegalese writer, Boubacar Boris Diop, on the problematic circuits of teaching African literature first legitimized in Europe in African universities
A new biography of Tanzania’s first president, Julius Nyerere, reveals a complicated legacy.
The African response to the coronavirus pandemic displays innovation and ingenuity.
Industrialization was sought as a panacea to ethnic conflicts, resource crisis, and unemployment. But what prospects does it actually offer to Ethiopian youth?
This week: #EndSars in Nigeria with Sa’eed Husaini and Annie Olaloku-Teriba. Stream live Tuesdays on Youtube, Facebook, Twitter. Subscribe to our Patreon for the podcast archive.
Why the World Food Program doesn’t deserve the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize.