
6425 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.


Africa makes us look better
For the author, the “us” are the thousands of Euro-American expatriates in Kenya, including herself.

Yahya Jammeh’s tribalism
How the Jammeh regime reproduced power in Gambia for more than two decades.

Kenya’s greatest virtue
Can African states offer new approaches to refugee asylum?

The Fourth Way
President Joseph Kabila, in power since 2001, knows young people in Congo want him gone.

Give us your money

Our Subjective List of The Best Books of 2016
We asked our editorial group, some contributors and friends to let us know what they would rate as their best hardcover they read this calendar year.

Weekend Music Break No.101

Making Europe White… Again

Kabila’s impasse
The Congo is a generous purveyor of African stereotypes, often making it difficult to see the politics through the thickets of hyperbole.

Africa Is a Country is joining Jacobin
Please consider giving to Africa is a Country, so that we can continue bringing you the new perspectives from across the continent.

What happens in the DRC after December 19th

“I will become a straight girl”
Almost four out of five men in South Africa surveyed had raped their first victim before the age of twenty.

The grapes of wrath

Inheritances of our fathers
History reminds us that the past is not something that can or should be left behind. Rather, we are morally obliged to keep reflecting on them.

Memory of the Present
Dominant culture in South Africa benignly recall slavery as part of a vaguely picturesque past that left us with beautiful colonial houses, award-winning wines and tourism.

Is your mobile phone company seeing like a state?
How phones change the terrain on which Kenyans can make claims for services, redistribution, and recognition.

If Africa is a country, then Fidel Castro is one of our national heroes
On 25 November 2016, Fidel Castro passed away. To many Africans Fidel was a hero, playing a central role in their liberation from colonialism.

The Nigerians are coming
Nigerian cinema is finally being embraced outside Nollywood for its diversity and capacity to adapt to dramatic technological and infrastructural shifts.

Don’t call me Toubab
“White person!,” people passing by shout, smiling and waving at me. I am black. I am African. I am Rwandan.”