6438 Article(s) by:
Miguna Miguna
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.

It’s Africans’ turn to help Norwegians
A campaign by a Norwegian student group wants fundraising causes not be based on exploiting stereotypes. Also that aid be based on real needs, not “good” intentions.

Does it matter where an African film ends and begins
The eleventh edition of African films we’d like to get on people’s radars. We can’t guarantee that these films will be available everywhere.

Bono’s Big Ideas for Africa
Please, no more articles claiming to discuss African issues, but which are just rock stars turning up at US universities spouting nonsense.
Revolutions and Dancing

Kyle Shepherd X
The pianist, Kyle Shepherd, loathes labels, especially of him as the architect or savior of Cape Jazz, the music associated with Cape Town.
Friday Music Break, N°24

How to write about children in Africa
Children’s Radio Foundation’s shows are a testament to children’s capacity to be agents for change and to confront critical community issues themselves.
10 films to watch out for, N°10

Stripping back the facade of modern hip-hop to reveal its African roots
Tendai Maraire of Shabazz Palaces breaks down his ‘Pungwe’ mixtape for us.
Things you don’t know about African Women
#Elections2012

The political fight is wherever people gather
Can young Angolan activists inspired by Angola’s underground rap scene take on a political elite that has ruled for decades?

Hair politics over a church loop
In this Weekend Bonus Music Break, No.23, features musicians as diverse as Ghanaian-Swiss duo, OY, to familier sightings on Africa Is a Country: Spoek Mathambo and Sinkane.

Kehinde Wiley Goes To Paris
The American artist says he wants to tackle Françafrique; to turn it on its head. But in the process, he can’t help repeat stereotypes and artificial divisions.

My favorite things from the last six months
Art South Africa me asked to pick my “Best Six;” basically my “favorite (six) things from the last six months.”

A voice that is incessantly in exile
South African jazz singer Sathima Bea Benjamin’s life complicates jazz history and shows how Africans reshaped American jazz in the 20th century.

No one ever finishes anything, we just stop
In Alain Gomis’s “Tey’, ‘Aujourd’hui,” a man lives the last day of his life.
10 films to watch out for, N°9

Only Decent White People
A Dutch comedy about an interracial relationship may shape Dutch views of black people there in very negative ways from which they may not recover for a while.