
Why I’ll keep talking to South Africans about race
While Nigeria’s class divide is not between rich whites and poor blacks, it still has a lot in common with postapartheid South Africa.
6420 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

While Nigeria’s class divide is not between rich whites and poor blacks, it still has a lot in common with postapartheid South Africa.

A good time to bring back this piece—first written in 2002—on the power of song to fuel political struggle.

There is a lively, angry, often chaotic debate about the role and place of the father of the South African nation.

The outcome of the Algerian revolution should not be pre-determined by a (neo)liberal Euro-American global order. Listen to the people.

Poor reading scores among South African children highlights the need for decolonization in book publishing, teaching and policy implementation.

Media coverage of rhino poaching in Southern Africa not only fails to address white control over conservation, but also reinforces it.

On mobility, democracy and making a decolonized future for Africa.

Structural Adjustment Programs, implemented by the World Bank and IMF in developing countries, leave the administrative state especially unequipped to deal with climate change.

The erratic electricity supply in Nigeria is a metaphor for life there.

There is a long history of white artists representing black people in France, reproducing stereotypes and failing to capture the people they claim to represent.

Two sides of the same e-waste documentary.

Remembering Joe Miller, a historian of eastern Angola and central Africa, who died at 79 on 12 March 2019.

Why do so many of the urban poor support John Mahama and Ghana’s opposition National Democratic Congress?

Rapper YoungstaCPT’s headspace is shaped by Cape Town’s history.

Why a military-only approach against Boko Haram in the countries bordering Lake Chad will always fail: it doesn’t address the root causes of political conflict there.

The photo series Another Way Home captures how migration effects families, communities and individuals—those who travel and those who stay behind.

Cameroon claims to be a democracy. Then why are even moderates like Maurice Kamto in jail?

If in India there has been an investment in myth of Mohandas Gandhi as a non-racial icon, in South Africa Gandhi also has his defenders.

Combating Zionism requires a vision that pays no credence to ethno-nationalism. As the world reconsiders the one-state solution, South Africa should lead the way.

If Rwandan support for the RPF and Kagame is so universal and genuine, why the murder, frequent arrest, torture and imprisonment of opposition politicians and investigative journalists?