
Capitalism is a disease
Anyone who lives in fear of getting sick exists in a state of unfreedom.
Anyone who lives in fear of getting sick exists in a state of unfreedom.
Today's social movements rely on tech collectives to organize safely. But few know the history of other technologies used by earlier liberation movements.
AIAC Talk this week: the historical entanglement of South African football with English football, and what that tells us about politics and sport. Watch it on our YouTube channel.
An encounter on a Cape Town bus forces the writer to think about religion, especially Christianity, and queerness.
Why are South African government policies benefiting black mothers still controversial?
This week on AIAC Talk, we’re debating whether the moment is right for South Africa’s left to form a new party. Watch it live on YouTube.
Assuming today’s socioeconomic crisis benefits the Left is folly. That will only happen if we have the political vision to make class the fault line of social polarization, and for that we need to face the challenge of constructing a new party.
The death of the Zulu king highlights the unresolved issues that continue to shapes lives in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa.
A new film by South African director Nomawonga Khumalo represents the contradictions and nuances of black women’s interior lives.
Adidas and other private, for-profit companies that are embracing corporate queerness are never going to contribute to our liberation.
Scholars Archie Mafeje and Cedric Robinson challenged Eurocentrism. Their ideas are becoming more widely known. They're the focus of AIAC Talk this week.
The Joint Boundary Commission that Lesotho and South Africa have revived, gives hope that some sort of border deal might be possible between the two countries.
Corruption is South Africa’s pandemic—one that has been disenfranchising and killing people long before our transition to democracy.
What is the South African political leader Robert Sobukwe’s legacy today?
The system to pay out royalties to musicians in South Africa says a lot about the racial inequalities in the local industry.
#FeesMustFall was the most serious challenge to the post-apartheid political order, but didn’t connect to broader working-class struggles. Now, despite police brutality, students are beginning to make those linkages.
If we stop using terms to describe race at all, we risk undermining our struggle to eliminate racism.
Is the future of podcasting a show featuring isiZulu retellings of 19th-century African life combined with an original soundscape composed with a revolutionary ethos?
What would happen if people could transform state policy based on the principle of social justice? The AIDS struggle in South Africa has some lessons.