
People see women as enemies of the nation
Recently, gender-based violence has entered Senegal’s national conversation. But are people only paying lip service? On the AIAC Podcast we discuss women and the nation.
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Recently, gender-based violence has entered Senegal’s national conversation. But are people only paying lip service? On the AIAC Podcast we discuss women and the nation.

Gonora Sounds’ music gets at what it means to be a Zimbabwean: We might be crying, but we are also dancing.

Where do African countries fall in the threatened invasion of Ukraine by Russia? Will African states side with the US or their European allies or with Russia?

The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa was presented as a game-changer to address hunger. The consensus 15 years later: It failed.

On The Africa Is a Country Podcast: Israel's entanglement in a strike by South African dairy workers, and its campaign to acquire accreditation at the African Union.

The documentary film Mane about two women — a rapper and a wrestler — is a much-needed boost of fresh air in the male-saturated tale of the “Generation hip hop” of Senegal.

On the South African-born anthropologist John Comaroff and the political economy of silence in academia.

The Kenyan Organic Intellectuals Network wants to challenge the vague manner elites there deal with the past and take on the challenges of the present.

Kenyan filmmaker Jim Chuchu explores the struggle between indigenous cultural practice and Pentecostal Christianity.

The founders of Tarikhona Hona aim to archive the lives of the LGBTQI+ community in Morocco.

This week on AIAC Talk: Pio Gama Pinto was Kenya’s first post-independence martyr. Why does he matter today?

Although overlooked this awards season, a new film by Lebohang Jeremiah Mosese deserves your attention.

Thoughts on the conclusion of the 2021 African Cup of Nations.

Egyptian women's struggle today stands on the shoulders of many historical role models. One of them is Huda Shaarawi.

The Afropolitics of one of the characters, Sam Obisanya, makes the second season of TV series "Ted Lasso" even better than the first.

On AIAC Radio, Folarin Ajibade (@folarinistired) was inspired enough by Xavier Livermon's book "Kwaito Bodies" to make a mix.

Robert Vinson's biography of Albert Luthuli hints at how liberation histories might be reframed to better address the problems of the present.

This week, AIAC talks with Dr. Lassane Ouedraogo on what's behind the coup in Burkina Faso.

Reflecting on the 2022 edition of the African Cup of nations, and the successes of small countries.

With the recent series of military coups, especially in West Africa, what is left for the future of politics on the African continent?