
The content we crave?
On the next AIAC Talk, we’re talking about African film and TV in the age of streaming. Stream it live Tuesday on YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter. Subscribe to our Patreon for the archive.
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Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.

On the next AIAC Talk, we’re talking about African film and TV in the age of streaming. Stream it live Tuesday on YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter. Subscribe to our Patreon for the archive.

In Nigeria, to be an emigrant is to possess illustrious social capital and a badge of honor that is not only reserved for you, but also for your family.

Cities will continue to exist and grow despite the coronavirus crisis because of the distinctly human need for social interaction, physical contact, and collaboration.

On this month’s AIAC Radio we head to Cape Town to understand how this creole city’s musical culture resisted containment throughout history. Listen on Worldwide FM and follow us on Mixcloud.

Dennis Brutus described Arthur Nortje as “perhaps the best South African poet of our time.”

The ideal South African is not the citizen but the consumer, and this is impressed upon children immediately when some are sent to private schools.

Africans’ lack of knowledge about our own shared refugee experiences continues to fuel hate and discrimination on the continent.

Imagine if African films could enjoy shooting and editing on the continent, uninhibited by national and international politics.

Ideas for how to pressure Uganda’s “M-Pigs” to become elected representatives who actually serve in the public interest.

Looking beyond the West to understand how to manage pandemics without choosing between saving lives or livelihoods. Live on YouTube Tuesday. Subscribe to our Patreon for the archive.

Lateef K. Jakande, also known as Baba Kekere, was the first civilian governor of Nigeria’s Lagos State.

What is one particular place when represented photographically?

Over the past decade, support from Western Christian groups have become an increasingly dominant force in Israel’s relationships with Africa.

Director Taiwo Egunjobi disavows Nollywood’s penchant for crass comedies and maudlin dramas.

Trevor Madondo achieved a certain immortality in Zimbabwean cricketing lore precisely for the way in which he confronted cricket’s history as an instrument of empire.

Dieudo Hamadi’s film ‘Downstream to Kinshasa’ is a powerful antidote to the DRC’s collective amnesia around the Six-Day War and its aftermath.

No amount of clean technology, industrial growth or boosts to GDP will avert the economic and climate crises inextricable to profit-driven extraction.

The performative documentary ‘Sun of the Soil’ restores the historical record of the ‘great king’ of Mali, Mansa Musa.

Drug use among young people in Nairobi’s slums is on the rise. Youth also face arbitrary arrests by the police, resulting in jail time which turns them into hardcore criminals in a vicious cycle.

How economic disparities, inequities, and opportunities occur side by side in Lesotho.