Beyond humanitarian aid
The war in Sudan shows how during conflict, the internet is as critical as food or medicine.
The war in Sudan shows how during conflict, the internet is as critical as food or medicine.
How the UAE-backed RSF looted Sudan's National Museum.
Women in Sudan have gone from being state subjects to war spoils.
As catastrophe unfolds in Sudan, most of the world continues to turn a blind eye.
In Sudan, the focus must remain on supporting the Sudanese people’s aspirations for peace, stability, and democratic governance.
The indifference towards Sudan's suffering can be traced to a disturbing pattern deeply rooted in antiblackness.
As the slaughter continues unabated in Gaza, it is abundantly clear that both the present and history are often written by the victors.
A conversation with members of Sudan’s resistance committees and Magdi elGizouli.
Since 2019, two separate political processes developed simultaneously in Sudan: one at the state level and the other at the grassroots. Today’s war originates in the predominance of the former over the latter.
On this week's AIAC podcast, we discuss the roots behind fighting between factions of Sudan’s military.
Writer and feminist activist Reem Abbas on the personal costs of the war between Sudan’s military and the Rapid Support Forces.
The significance of ending the ongoing war in Sudan cannot be overstated, and represents more than just an end to violence. It provides a critical moment for the international community to follow the lead of the Sudanese people.
Since 2019’s revolution, the Sudanese elite and its international backers suppressed popular democratic energies. Although military in-fighting rages on, the accumulated experiences over the past three years has ensured that the resistance cannot be easily broken.
Leila Aboulela’s historical novel of nineteenth century Sudan tells the story of one of Africa’s first successful, anticolonial uprisings.
For democracy to succeed in Sudan, the process towards civilian rule must itself be democratized, rather than largely driven by top-down efforts.
In a country as diverse and divided as Sudan, who gets to define women’s rights and struggles?
Ethnic enclaves are not unusual in many cities and towns across Sudan, but in Port Sudan, this polarized structure instigated and facilitated communal violence.
The Dorpa Band from Port Sudan, a city on the Red Sea coast in eastern Sudan, embodies Beja Culture. Their bandleader, writes what drives their music.
The dissonance between what is communicated through local and international propaganda machines and what is actually taking place across the streets of Sudan.
The best support that the Sudanese revolution can get from international allies is for them to reject and fight their own governments’ efforts to force a government of killers on Sudan for the second time.