
The hip hop president?
Hip hop and the Black political mainstream more broadly, continues to have hope in the promises of American capitalism.
6420 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

Hip hop and the Black political mainstream more broadly, continues to have hope in the promises of American capitalism.

The Indian activist ES Reddy led the fight against South African apartheid at the UN. More importantly, his life reflected the best of left internationalism.

Mbembe’s work serves as a guide to understand our fragmented global present and the urgent matter of charting ways out of our shared dark night.

As some Gambians speak before the country’s TRC, the testimonies create a space for their compatriots to express ideas about rights, dignity and social values.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a rigid educational system, largely unchanged from the colonial era. Slam artists and activists are working to open it up to alternative spaces of expression.

The history of Africa involves navigating utopian visions and brutal realities as the recent work of Egyptian filmmaker Tamer el-Said’s and before that, Ayi Kwei Armah show.

We can only end hunger when people have control over what they eat and how that food is produced.

Kenya’s Deputy President, William Ruto, wants to be president. He projects himself as a go-getter. But there is a more sinister story behind his hustler narrative.

South Africans are learning the hard way that corruption cannot simply be solved through technical fixes and increasing “accountability” through locking the villains up.

New Zealand’s Prime Minister is a very nice centrist. People in the rest of the world, including Africans, calling for her to be emulated should be careful what they wish for.

The recent #EndSARS protest in Nigeria reveals how young people carve out agency in the context of Nigeria’s dysfunctional and violent state.

New biographies reveal Wangari Maathai as a reflective scholar and critical thinker.

The background to the #EndSARS protests and celebrating a movement that challenges Nigeria’s ruling class.

Recalling its Ebola hysteria would help the US better confront COVID-19.

In 1969, the OAU proposed its own refugee convention to reflect African values. Why did it not become policy across the continent?

In the shadow of the US election, this Tuesday on AIAC Talk, we talk African immigration to the United States with Abraham Zere and Aya Saed.

Any talk about green transition and sustainability must not become a façade for neocolonial schemes of plunder and domination.

At the largest gathering of black people he had ever seen together in Amsterdam, the author, originally from Kenya, wonder why they knew so little of each other.

What could or should full decolonization in Kenya look like?

The recent election has led to violence and general pandemonium. An explosion of independent journalism offers hope.