
Speculative view
Two new Nigerian films explore the world of traditional worship in Nigeria
6420 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

Two new Nigerian films explore the world of traditional worship in Nigeria

How to make sense of the early 2019 protests in Zimbabwe.

Albert Luthuli was ANC President when South Africa’s biggest liberation movement turned to armed struggle. He’s been the subject of much conjecture. What did he actually think about political violence?

Is emigrating to Africa an option for Black Brazilians in the time of Jair Bolsonaro’s toxic, racist, rightwing regime?

It’s the first time an African president appears to have rigged an election, not in favor of his hand-picked successor, but in favor of an opposition politician.

Despite consistent and protracted attempts by government to repress access to social media and freedom of expression, citizen’s voices are being heard over the internet in Cameroon.

In 2018, we hope to continue translating scholarly debates and high-level political and cultural analyses into accessible language.

Samir Amin’s life resembled that of Karl Marx: a man without a homeland, but one whose home was a chosen commitment to a historical project.

Displacing African Studies outside of Africa and emptying it of transformative potential, obscures its revolutionary legacy. The result: an impotent, banal field.

Africa, for Donald Trump and his National Security Advisor John Bolton, is a place to risk a little and chase some glory. US media just parrots it.

Discussions on the global climate crisis tend to ignore the role that Africans are playing at the leading edge in the fight against climate change.

In recent years, Rwanda and Ethiopia have been some of the largest recipients of aid money from the UK and US governments, as well as some of the West’s leading philanthropies, including the Gates Foundation.

The land issue is the most divisive issue that Namibia has experienced since independence.

Land reform in South Africa has to not only tackle racial inequalities of ownership, but also the power of chiefs and the Zulu royal family.

Why do people on the border between Nigeria and northern Cameroon refer to Boko Haram as slave holders?

There is a seamless transition in how the South African state in tandem with capital, for 400 years utilize prisons to control black bodies.

Negotiations for a minimum wage put Nigeria’s trade unions at the front of poor people’s struggles.

The power of having a god who resembles us.

Many African countries are by now capitalist societies and analytically need to be treated as such when we talk about or study them.

Passport privilege remains an entirely unaddressed, unsustainable inequity, and the most consistently overlooked factor that defines every single immigration debate and “crisis” of movement and migration.