Nelson Mandela and US imperialism
In his writings and speeches, Nelson Mandela exposed the links between American power, capitalism and racism.
In his writings and speeches, Nelson Mandela exposed the links between American power, capitalism and racism.
Sixteen years after the end of the Angolan civil war, the Angolan state considers how to properly remember and memorialize the leader of UNITA.
How can South Africa's biggest trade union federation, Cosatu, remain relevant in the face of declining membership and a failing formal economy?
What will it take to get Germany to own up fully to the atrocities it committed during the Genocide in Namibia?
The complex, and at times strained, relations between African-Americans and African immigrants in the United States.
Policymakers need to properly assess the risks to ordinary Congolese people from expanding the “conflict minerals” category.
South Africa's white nationalists are finally in the spotlight, thanks to Donald Trump. Nobody likes what they see.
The planned global Education Outcomes Fund—the UN seems onboard—would create markets for “non-state” providers while guaranteeing profits for private investors that purchase “impact bonds.”
The use of Marxist-inspired arguments, often distorted, to support racist or nationalist political positions, is known as "rossobrunismo" (red-brownism) in Italy.
Nkrumah's government was driven by large scale state development projects. They have a mixed legacy. Can Ghanaians “redeem” the fruits of his development visions?
Bobi Wine, building off political protest of the last decade, has become a symbol for a new politics in Uganda.
Eddison Zvobgo was both implicated in and a critic of Mugabe's rule. He paid for it. His niece remembers him.
2018 witnessed a fundamental shift in how Ethiopia's ruling party governs. How did it come about, what is incomplete about this transition, and what happens next.
A brief history of MN Roy, an Indian delegate to the Mexican Communist Party and how the Soviet Union came to support liberation efforts in colonized nations.
The rise of populism across the US and Western Europe has been well documented, but it is not only an American or European issue. The case of Lesotho.
South Africa's problems are no longer specific to the apartheid legacy, but about more global issues of poverty and inequality.
For Zimbabweans, we're back where we started, then. Hope, no change. Still.
So far, the only real beneficiaries of the rapprochement between Ethiopia and Eritrea are Ethiopia and Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki.
When will the state-sanctioned violence in Cameroon be sufficient to cause Western nations to stop supporting President Paul Biya and his military?
Recent events reveal the Mnangagwa administration in Zimbabwe will extend, if not intensify, the kleptocracy, corruption and repression of the Mugabe regime.