
The exilic geographies of the South
Dugmore Boetie was part of a wave of South African writers who fled Apartheid. His exile and future literary notoriety, however, took a different path to some of the more classic refugee peregrinations.
4 Article(s) by:
Benjamin Lawrance is Professor of History at the University of Arizona and Editor-in-Chief of African Studies Review.

Dugmore Boetie was part of a wave of South African writers who fled Apartheid. His exile and future literary notoriety, however, took a different path to some of the more classic refugee peregrinations.

The journal’s editor acknowledges that it has a long way to go before most Africa-based scholars recognize it as an especially African journal.

Has migration policy reckoned with epidemics like Ebola?

Protests against Togo’s ruling family aren’t unusual, but this time there’s a few unusual components, including that the protesters have a clear platform of demands.