
Renewable energy’s dark side
As countries expand investment in decentralized renewable energy, its worth keeping an eye on who’s profiting.
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Paul Milchik is a pseudonym for the author of this piece. His name has been changed due to his status as an international student in the US during the second Trump administration, in a context where foreign students have been targeted for detention and deportation as a result of expressing pro-Palestinian views.

As countries expand investment in decentralized renewable energy, its worth keeping an eye on who’s profiting.

A new project from Cuban rapper El Individuo humanizes the Cuban perspective, inadvertently flying in the face of the United States Republican Party’s agenda.

What counts as “authentic” decolonization as the term takes over our social media and influencer bubbles? And how we can sharpen our activism.

For the peripheries and proletarians of the world—most of the world—Maradona is a symbol of defiance against the football aristocracy, corporate bosses and empire itself.

Members of the Capitalism In My City project reflect on the commodification of education in Kenya.

Speculative fiction by writers from Africa explore viral apocalypses. What can we learn from art on catastrophe?


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How has Nigeria’s film industry responded to the protests of #EndSARS?

Can we move from temporary shame about our endless consumption of unethically sourced jewels and smartphones to concrete action?

The Ugandan government quells public unrest with violence. What won’t it do in the name of “security”?

Angolans have made themselves in and out of Angola, in conversation with the world; they carry with them the deep look of permanent uncertainty. But also take with them the smile of resistance.

Ekwa Msangi, realizadora Tanzaniana-Americana, mostra a história de muitos imigrantes com a experiência de uma família angolana de imigração.

How Kwame Nkrumah and Julius Nyerere’s approaches to gender politics, help reshape feminist visions for reclaiming a developmental state.

White settler returnees to Portugal in 1975, and the history of decolonization, can help us understand the complicated category of refugee.

Nigerian cinema is obsessed with films about the wealthy. Can class politics shine through?

What will it take for the decades-old regime of Cameroon’s President Paul Biya to address the root cause of the country’s senseless conflict?

A new report from the Transnational Institute suggests free trade does nothing but drain Tunisia’s wealth.

Recent changes affect the daily lives of ex-combatants and other soldiers who struggle to reintegrate into society a decade after the end of the war.

This week on AIAC Talk: How Ethiopia helps us make sense of the nature of the African state. Tune in Tuesday at 19:00 SAST, 17:00 GMT, and 12:00 EST on Youtube, Facebook, or Twitter.