
This is what a neoliberal trade union looks like
Zambia’s mining unions increasingly focus on profit-generating businesses, at the expense of collective action.
6431 Article(s) by:
Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.

Zambia’s mining unions increasingly focus on profit-generating businesses, at the expense of collective action.

Edward Said once said of the usefulness of exile for intellectual work: it involves adopting “a spirit of opposition, rather than accommodation.” James Baldwin and Sisonke Msimang took it to heart.

No primer aniversario do estreno do filme ‘Black Panther,’ re-publicamos o ensaio de Russell Rickford traducido em Português.

Constant attention to segregation in formerly white South African schools limits our understanding of how race works in the school system.

There are far richer and complex stories to the Africa’s history than we think we know; especially the perspectives of African women.

The contrasting receptions for high profile visitors to Ghana—first Prince Charles and Camilla from the UK, then a group of African-American celebrities from the United States—says a lot.

The secretary of a Tanzanian bus drivers’ union explains why the system of privately owned commercial buses is breaking down. He proposes collective ownership.

2019 marks the twentieth anniversary of Chad’s first feature film, ‘Bye Bye Africa.’

The connections between technocratic development policies, neocolonialism, colonial denialism and the turn to the right in German public discourse.

In Somalia young people are the majority, yet have to act and perform “age”—appear older—to succeed or get anywhere in life.

The latest trick is to transfer tax-payer funded aid aimed at Africa and the Middle East into the pockets of corporations and individuals.

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.