
Unpacking South Africa’s COVID-19 “rescue package”
South Africa’s R50bn ($26bn) rescue package is 10% of its GDP. It is a major step forward, but some warning lights are flashing.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.

South Africa’s R50bn ($26bn) rescue package is 10% of its GDP. It is a major step forward, but some warning lights are flashing.

A post-colonial visual meditation on archive, memory, and colonial violence.

Nelson Mandela’s life teaches us that being quarantined is not the end of politics, but for the regeneration of politics.

Malawi is experiencing a crisis over the legitimacy of the democratic state itself.

In South Africa, social distancing to bring down COVID-19 infections takes a decidedly local shape. In a racialized society, it manifests primarily as white melancholia and black Afro-pessimism.

Relationships between African countries and China are more complex than they appear in the media and academia.

Will the coronavirus pandemic extend Museveni’s authoritarianism or the lockdown instead provide openings for Uganda’s opposition?

The author of a book on football and revolution in Egypt gives us a list of must reads on football in the Middle East and North Africa.

Kenyans are split about the legacy of president Daniel Arap Moi, who served from 1978 to 2002 and died on 4 February 2020: Vile and reprehensible vs a benign Baba, history suggests the latter.

How partisanship distorts the construction and narration of public memory about historical events, especially the resistance against apartheid.

The Ramaphosa Presidency has been praised for its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, but the compensating measures that accompany it are inadequate to protect much of the population.

Capturing the absurdity of everyday life in Sudan under, now ousted President, Omar al Bashir.

While COVID-19 hasn’t yet hit African cities as hard as those in the global North, it will eventually likely penetrate deep into the countryside where the most vulnerable live and where health facilities are rudimentary.

Are the international community and the African Union really powerless to stop the fratricidal war in Cameroon, or are they just indifferent?

Few things are going on as normal during the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunately, political dysfunction in Lesotho continues, with negative ramifications for Basotho.

Black Brazilians have to fight official and popular narratives hiding the country’s brutal and violent legacy of slavery.

How can a fragmented and precarious working class unite against exploitative labor relations and, in the process, transform them?

Pentecostalism in Nigeria preaches that prayer, not political action, is the solution to COVID-19.

The author and journalist shares a reading list from her time as The New York Times’ Bureau Chief for West Africa.

Responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, African governments should stop seeing non-governmental actors as a threat to their own legitimacy.