We are all potential advocates
Director Shameela Seedat’s film about trainee lawyers provides a sort of celebration of youth on this continent and a vision of the next generation of Africans.
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Karen Chalamilla is a culture writer and researcher based in Dar es Salaam.
Director Shameela Seedat’s film about trainee lawyers provides a sort of celebration of youth on this continent and a vision of the next generation of Africans.
Lula’s challenge in Brazil: To be successful with proposed reforms, he’d need to take back the anti-systemic appeal stolen by the far-right.
Mexico’s president has a mandate for radical change, but this change must be negotiated within a context of limits produced by the neoliberal period itself.
The Nigerian-American author of the novel “Harry Sylvester Bird” talks to the Radical Books Collective ahead of her appearance at their book club.
Western conservation NGOs condemn violence against Maasai, but also don’t want herders or subsistence hunters on land they want to control and profit from.
While Chileans have defeated the post-authoritarian neoliberal regime, they face major obstacles on the road to a post-neoliberal social democracy.
We know an enormous amount about what precipitated the 2012 Marikana massacre, but relatively little about what is behind the violence there since.
Xiomara Castro’s leftist government must create capacity for self-determination in a state vulnerable to US pressure and constructed to serve monopoly capital.
The British-Somali poet Warsan Shire’s audacious yet uneven volume of poetry captures the quiet loneliness of African immigrant lives in the West.
The Marikana Massacre changed democratic South Africa forever. It can also catalyze resistance to the current order.
The left’s win in Colombia signals that after more than six decades of war, people just want to live with dignity and in peace.
South Africa’s ruling party’s devotion to its policy of cadre deployment is an indication that it values its own power more than the public interest.
The novelist on 3 books he returns to: by Wole Soyinka, Ibn Khaldun, and a third on the history and the system of writing of an early 20th-century Cameroonian king.
Journalism has become a risky and dangerous business in Benin.
Africa’s engagement with the world before European colonialism holds unexpected episodes of un-colonial power relations.
Why languages, particularly black African languages, have become a battleground in postapartheid power and identity politics in South Africa.