
6393 Article(s) by:
Sheila Adufutse
Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.


Not the Country We’re Sitting in Now
The first in a series of four posts to commemorate what would have been James Baldwin’s 90th birthday.

Not just some passing foreign journalist
Lawyer and writer Elnathan John interviewed U.S. photographer Glenna Gordon. Listen.

The balkanization of Nigeria?
For those who want Nigeria to balkanize, try being a small, ineffectual African country.

It’s Time to Stop Laughing
In neoliberal global capitalism, anything can be monetized, even the criminal exploits of a marginal schizophrenic.

Erykah Badu’s Royal Problem
Erykah Badu’s online defense of her visit to autocratic Swaziland exposed her lack of knowledge about the continent.

Whining white South Africans
For the love of Woolworths, stop pretending like you and only you know what Nelson Mandela would have wanted.

Africa Is a Country Radio: Episode #2

The new kid on the block
Admit you didn’t expect the Economic Freedom Fighters or EFF, a breakaway from the ANC, to do so well in South Africa’s latest elections.

Nigeria’s baby boom
Each year more babies are born in Nigeria than in the entire continent of Europe.

Why Blogging is a Threat to the Ethiopian Government
In the past decade, more journalists have fled Ethiopia than any other country in the world.

The Politics of the Belly
The bottom line of politics in electoral democracies in 21st century capitalism: Whatever patronage politicians dispense, there’s no free lunch.

The Dangers of a Single Book Cover
The historian Simon Stephens discovers a meme in the book covers of novels set in or with African themes.

Fumana isazisi sakho. Bhalisa. Vota.*

Hip hop and electoral politics
South Africans vote on May 2nd, 2014, the country’s 5th democratic elections. Do rappers vote?

Elections and captured politics
Twenty years after 1994, there is the deep discontent among the population about electoral politics and of politics in general. Freedom turned out to be a mirage.

Jeremy Clarkson’s long history of escaping accountability
Cancel Jeremy Clarkson, cancel Top Gear and cancel British jingoism.

What took the world so long to bring back our girls?
Western media tends to render female children invisible not just by a lack of coverage but also in the language we talk about them.
#Photojournal: Back To The City Festival

In Search of Freedom
Belgian-Congolese filmmaker, Nganji Laeh, along with musician and composer Badi and filmmaker Monique Mbeka Phoba, explore present day DRC via film.