
The Dutch disease (and its prescription)
Even in spite of a recent history of reactionary backlash, the movement against #ZwartePiet (Black Pete) has had some success.
6431 Article(s) by:
Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.

Even in spite of a recent history of reactionary backlash, the movement against #ZwartePiet (Black Pete) has had some success.


For many young Africans, going abroad is seen as the only solution to help their parents struggling to make ends meet.

Much of black youth culture in South Africa celebrates constant self-invention, and is built on the gospel of entrepreneurship.

Nostalgia for Gaddafi reflects a depressing understanding of African politics which rules that a dictator is better than a chaotic political void.

Nigerien band Anewal eschews explicit politics and sings mostly of harmony and brotherhood.

How media and anti-corruption campaigns reinforces, or fail to adequately address, racialized and ahistorical accounts of corruption as a problem in South Africa.

What does the Catalan independence movement mean for African separatists?

Blackness, like the nation of Haiti herself, is a thing to be punished for committing the crime of daring to exist and resist.

A big reason for this is to counter the growing success of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

South African public life is rife with revisionism, often opportunistic. Take the case of Mangosuthu Buthelezi.

In Nigeria, there is a critical mass of scientific, medical and public health expertise—from managing medical crises, natural disasters and the health-related fallouts of economic breakdown.

The stuff we couldn’t cover the second week of December, so we compiled them here in byte sizes.

On the arrest and detention of Cameroonian writer and scholar, Patrice Nganang.

The “two state solution” for Israel and Palestine will be the culmination of the same political vision that motivated apartheid South Africa.


Interview with Fred Khumalo, author of a novel about the sinking of the SS Mendi, a warship carrying hundreds of black South African soldiers.

Many social media users have construed Akufo-Addo’s words in the President of France’s presence, as somehow radical.

The glut of books on Fanon serve as a guide for reading him through the challenges of our present. But they also reveal the extent to which reading Fanon today is not such a straightforward operation.

Angola’s new president may still chart his own political course against party directives and the interests of the Dos Santos family.