
Fueling rightwing populism
Xenophobia after the #ParisAttacks isn’t limited to boneheads like Rupert Murdoch.
6426 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

Xenophobia after the #ParisAttacks isn’t limited to boneheads like Rupert Murdoch.

The writer, in graduate school in Britain, writes about the various roadblocks in the way of Africans, in his case Ugandans, to travel to Europe.

How can international advocacy movements be self-reflective and accountable to the people on whose behalf they speak?

For all the good press, the majority of German society are uncomfortable with people who frame their demands from a postcolonial perspective.


The recent explosions in the Stade de France was one of the most surreal things to ever take place in a stadium built nearly two decades ago specifically to house history.

A Congolese writer whose work oscillates between gripping dystopia and humanist celebration.

There’s little doubt that Chinese and Arab interests are procuring land in Africa, but a careful review of the evidence suggests also point to local buyers.

A smallish woman from Mauritania, she rules the stage with a fiery intensity that only the most powerful divas can maintain.

Humanitarian images have obscured the causes and political complexities of disasters, and undermined the agency of their victims—both symbolically and practically.

To what extent has South Africa and South Africans failed to address the aftermath of Apartheid, the resonances of which can be felt to this day? To what extent are we living in a post-traumatic space?

The Mathare Social Justice Center’s activists work to shake off the menacing insults of forced evictions, tenure insecurity, police violence and increasing precarity.

After a tough election in Tanzania, won by the ruling party, a constitutional crisis looms in Zanzibar.



White South African cricket writers should stop commenting on cricket as if the game is apolitical or the national team is still as all-white as when the country was first allowed back into international cricket.

The new documentary film, “We Will Win Peace,” skillfully debunks many myths behind conflict minerals in the Congo.

Festejo Pachone is a crowdfunded music estival in Bogotá, Colombia that disproves the perception of the city is culturally lacking.

The incumbent Alassane Ouattara’s electoral sweep might be a good outcome for Côte d’Ivoire.

The film is doubly removed from the West Africa in which it was made and in whose name it claims to speak.