
A compassionate take on an invisible struggle
A new film by South African director Nomawonga Khumalo represents the contradictions and nuances of black women’s interior lives.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

A new film by South African director Nomawonga Khumalo represents the contradictions and nuances of black women’s interior lives.

A novel and Netflix film about Spanish colonialism in Equatorial Guinea raises questions about appropriation and storytelling.

How early post-independence clarity on the link between food self-sufficiency and national sovereignty offers lessons for contemporary efforts.

Adidas and other private, for-profit companies that are embracing corporate queerness are never going to contribute to our liberation.

Scholars Archie Mafeje and Cedric Robinson challenged Eurocentrism. Their ideas are becoming more widely known. They’re the focus of AIAC Talk this week.

Tracing the digital contours of the settler colony helps us understand how old inequalities will shape a future with artificial intelligence.

This month on AIAC Radio we talk with Marissa Moorman and Paulo Flores to see how a music culture born in the quintals of Luanda helped birth a nation. Listen on Worldwide FM.

The late Tanzanian president, John Pombe Magufuli, was initially lauded for his no-nonsense approach to corruption. But the cracks began to appear within months of his presidency.

The Joint Boundary Commission that Lesotho and South Africa have revived, gives hope that some sort of border deal might be possible between the two countries.

A new documentary focuses on using the soil’s carbon absorbent properties to solve the climate change problem.

En Tunisie, face au déni persistant de l’identité africaine, la communauté noire ne veut plus attendre.

Tunisia’s denial of its African identity persists today. Black Tunisians are fighting to change that.

On telling stories through the evocative and varied moments in which humans live, rather than through the predictable and artificial plots historians devise.

Corruption is South Africa’s pandemic—one that has been disenfranchising and killing people long before our transition to democracy.

What is the South African political leader Robert Sobukwe’s legacy today?

As we remember the Arab Spring, the starting point should not be that it failed, but that it’s incomplete. Watch it live on Youtube and subscribe to our Patreon for the archive.

The system to pay out royalties to musicians in South Africa says a lot about the racial inequalities in the local industry.

#FeesMustFall was the most serious challenge to the post-apartheid political order, but didn’t connect to broader working-class struggles. Now, despite police brutality, students are beginning to make those linkages.

COVID-19 exposes the deadly dominance of neoclassical economics in Africa.

Behind the anxieties about tackling forced displacement and terror, is the recognizable lexicon of racialized difference. This all infuses the practice of humanitarianism.