
The disastrous road of private prisons
Kenya’s prisons are in serious need of reform. Opening the door to private interests is not the solution.
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Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.

Kenya’s prisons are in serious need of reform. Opening the door to private interests is not the solution.

The curators of the Weltkulturen museum of ethnography in Frankfurt, Germany trace the origins of objects that ended up in their collections, and ask if they were: COLLECTED. BOUGHT. LOOTED?

Harlem rapper Sheck Wes’s star rises in the shadow of Dapper Dan and Cheikh Amadou Bamba.

Invisible City [Kakuma], a film about Kenya’s largest refugee camps, seems keen on making a point but is anchored on unsteady ground (with some shitty translation).

‘Alienation and Freedom,’ a massive collection of Frantz Fanon’s works, reveals his intellectual and political motivations, but also proves him enigmatic and inscrutable as ever.

The UN and South Africa’s Statistics Service are exaggerating immigrant numbers and playing with people’s lives in South Africa.

The Biya regime’s grip on power has been exposed more than ever before. It is revolting to watch.

The privatizing and deregulating education in Liberia as much as white saviorism should take the blame for the sexual violence under an NGO’s watch.

African demographic growth is expected to continue unabated over the next century. How should poverty reduction be addressed on the continent?

In 1968, France witnessed an extraordinary student uprising which changed politics. Morocco and Senegal did too, but we seldom talk about it.

Youth activism and the politics of violence in South Sudan.

In a world of fake news, shallow analysis and torrid pontificating, combining empirical evidence with emotive expression, is what give Roy’s essays legs.

Many will read Sisonke Msimang’s new memoir for its musings on exile and home, but it is also a political telling of the complicated South African transition.

Fasting and prayer don’t determine election results; and two, social media has profoundly changed the political landscape.

The time is ripe to ask not “does aid work,” but “how does aid work?”

The global response to a disease that largely effects the most marginalized populations of poorer countries shows a basic lack of respect for human rights on the part of international institutions.

When black students at an elite school in South Africa’s capital protested over how teachers treated them over their hair, everyone noticed. It’s not the same in township schools.

Pith helmets and jodhpurs aside, Melania Trump went to four African countries to promote her “Be Best” education initiative. What’s that about?

The renaming of streets is an important urban decolonial practice.

Try being a single woman in Nigeria.