Society as we know it
The hashtag movement #WeAreTired highlights that rape is an epidemic in Nigeria, but nobody in power wants to tackle it.
The hashtag movement #WeAreTired highlights that rape is an epidemic in Nigeria, but nobody in power wants to tackle it.
As the South African ruling class wages a protracted war against the poor and working class, it grows comfortable with the idea that people have more or less accepted the status quo.
Lessons for Americans in the age of Black Lives Matter, from the Niger Delta’s long struggle for environmental justice.
The labor and political organizing of Somali immigrants in the US Midwest should inspire more Americans to join the broader movement for worker rights and racial equality.
Uhuru Kenyatta's political war against his deputy president and supposed ally, William Ruto.
The current global discourse on Black Lives Matter does not yet adequately include anti-black racism beyond how the West experiences it.
The destruction of Tarkwa Bay in Lagos and the battle over what makes a city and who belongs in it.
Teacher, journalist, and photographer, Ndeye Seck, talks about feminism and her teaching practice, the Senegalese education system and her passion for football.
In his new book of his time in the Trump White House, former US National Security Adviser John Bolton shares Trump’s very few thoughts on Africa.
In Burkina Faso's mines, the differences between local and foreign workers are significant, especially what they get paid.
Can safety policies in the transnational mining sector in DR Congo break with the past?
How an industrial mine in the Congo reveals the inequity of wage distribution.
The optimism for "decent" and "sustainable" jobs in extractive industries does not fit with the reality in many African countries.
Traditional chiefs and the politics of labor recruitment in Zimbabwe’s platinum mining industry.
The introduction to our series, "Capital and Labor," that looks at the current state of the mining industry on the African continent.
Africans can lead the charge to decolonize the profit-driven biomedical system by challenging European and American claims to prioritized access to the COVID-19 vaccine.
The politics of local resistance in urban South Africa: Evidence from three informal settlements.
The periodic evictions of poor families in Nairobi follows in a long tradition in Kenya, dating to colonialism, to keep the city as a space for the elite.
It will be survival for the fittest when the COVID-19 vaccine arrives. As it stands, relevant international regimes for its distribution are not in Africa’s favor.
The coronavirus shut down in Ghana exposes the weaknesses and inequities in the country’s education system.