
6440 Article(s) by:
Sheila Adufutse
Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.


Bigger and bigger
Every month, Hipsters Don’t Dance send us their “Top World Carnival Tunes.” This is September 2015’s chart.

Rewriting the Black Mediterranean
Igiaba Scego is one of the most prominent voices of a new cohort of Black writers in Italy.

President dos Santos and the ruling MPLA: Afraid of Angolans
if Luaty Beirão dies in jail on their watch, Angola’s state will have a much bigger problem than small protests on their hands.

When Pelé ended a war
From July 1967 to January 1970, Nigeria was engaged in civil war. Apparently, one person could make the war pause: The G.O.A.T., Pelé.

The year of the girl child in Tanzania?

Memory, between nostalgia and archive
The relevance of Mauritius in the flows and exchanges between global superpowers, especially Britain and the United States.

The technological circuits of the African diaspora
Given this history of Black dispersal and displacement, what might a liberatory mobility look like?

Weekend Music Break No.85 – The Dance Edition!

The Memory Box
The digitization of oral histories of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and its aftermath.

Morocco’s ‘African’ identity
It will be Moroccans overseas that will give Gnawa music and culture an extra push towards the center of Morocco’s cultural identity.

A reflection from being on the inside of the South African badvertising industry

George Houser: US ally of African liberation struggles
An ally of a who’s who of revolutionaries like Patrice Lumumba, Amilcar Cabral, Oliver Tambo, and Kenneth Kaunda.

The holy fire that burns in the home
An interview with Richard Pakleppa, director of ‘Paths To Freedom’, a film on Namibian liberation.

Open Stellenbosch aims to move its fight beyond campus boundaries

Ride with Malitia Malimob
Rapper Chino’o talks about everything from immigration to police brutality in the U.S., and the future of Somalia.

Colombia, the peace process and a historic handshake
This transition from conflict to post-conflict represents a different approach to solve the underlying causes that gave raise to Colombia’s violence.

The World Bank has a terrible memory
Writing from afar plus writing with sun glasses that are heavily tainted with ideology is dangerous.

How to make sense of the coup in Burkina Faso
A list of articles to read, twitter accounts to follow, blogs to bookmarked to make sense of the ever evolving situation in Burkina Faso.
