
Hands off Africa
It is high time that the devastating impact of foreign intervention in Africa be taken as seriously as those in Europe.
It is high time that the devastating impact of foreign intervention in Africa be taken as seriously as those in Europe.
The specter of Angola's 1992 elections continues to impact the country's democratic process.
South Africans agree that redistribution and economic security are urgent. But will they arrive via a deepening of democracy and public accountability, or a return to authoritarianism?
On the South African Department of Tourism's pending sponsorship deal with Premier League football club, Tottenham Hotspur.
This month, Africa's largest democracy and economy goes to the polls. On the AIAC podcast, we discuss Nigeria's upcoming elections.
Fear of the future, longing for the past: the new story in South African politics.
Tunisia had sought to Arabize itself since independence and failed. It's relation to France still very much defines the country's character.
Which theology we will use to make sense of the relationship between church and state in Kenya?
For his third term, Lula faces the ghosts of Bolsonarismo, contradictions in his own ruling coalition, and tough global conditions. On our podcast this week.
Amilcar Cabral’s influence stretched far beyond the Portuguese colonies, profoundly influencing the political struggle in South Africa, past and present.
On the 50th anniversary of his murder, those who fought alongside Amilcar Cabral give a painful reminder of what could have been had he lived to see Guinea Bissau’s independence.
It’s tempting but unsatisfactory to blame poverty and weak regulation for the dumping of used vehicles in Africa.
It may seem obvious that a real transition to renewable energies is urgent, but not all transitions are the same or fair.
We need to rethink how people seek sustenance and wealth, but not divorced from their moral values, convictions, and expectations.
Global South countries are leveraging competition between China, Russia, and the US to address multifaceted crises. Is it enough? Tune in to our discussion on the AIAC Podcast.
The longue duree of the conflict in the Southern Cameroons, the rise of the current Ambazonian movement, as well as the dismal prospects for conflict resolution.
Peru’s leftist president, Pedro Castillo, was impeached and arrested last month, triggering nation-wide protests. This week on the AIAC podcast we discuss what comes next for the divided nation.
For French President, Emmanuel Macron, recruiting various African intellectuals turned out to be a key asset in trying to shift the Françafrique narrative, while simultaneously protecting French interests on the continent.
Anti-blackness is on the rise in Ayiti. But Haitians and Dominicans are resisting, in ways big and small.
In the wake of the insurrection in Brazil, an Afrobrazilian reflects personally on the entanglement of race and class in the country, and on what needs to be done to unravel it.