Resisting the new green colonialism
A proposed green hydrogen project in Tunisia prioritizes European energy needs over local sovereignty.
A proposed green hydrogen project in Tunisia prioritizes European energy needs over local sovereignty.
To see Kaouther Ben Hania’s latest film as condoning the West’s orientalism is to to ignore the agency of the women in it.
Small scale farmers in Tunisia are caught between international actors and a domestic policy that protects corporations.
The pathologization of ‘migrants’ in Tunisia and France shows how race and poverty shape our understanding of belonging.
After the Arab Spring, the African left was left demoralized and disorganized. However, a recent book argues that the revolution continues in quotidian life.
Tunisia had sought to Arabize itself since independence and failed. It's relation to France still very much defines the country's character.
It may seem obvious that a real transition to renewable energies is urgent, but not all transitions are the same or fair.
On this week's episode of AIAC Talk, Will Shoki speaks with Maha Ben Gadha about the changing political landscape in Tunisia.
COVID-19 exposed and exacerbated inequality and insecurity in North Africa's food systems. But the roots of the current crisis can be found in the legacy of colonialism and new forms of imperialism.
En Tunisie, face au déni persistant de l'identité africaine, la communauté noire ne veut plus attendre.
Tunisia’s denial of its African identity persists today. Black Tunisians are fighting to change that.
A new report from the Transnational Institute suggests free trade does nothing but drain Tunisia’s wealth.
Any talk about green transition and sustainability must not become a façade for neocolonial schemes of plunder and domination.
Meryam Joobeur’s film, Brotherhood explores Tunisia's outsized role in the Syrian conflict.
Mass monitoring poses a threat to democratic freedoms as the case of Tunisia shows.
Tunisia played England in France '98. English hooligans attacked Tunisians in the streets of Marseille. Algerians came to Tunisians' rescue.
In post-uprising Tunisia, the western backed military is hampering the country's transition to democracy.
Racism against its black citizens permeates the social, institutional, and political strata of Tunisia.
As with our last movie night post, we need to start with the bad news. 1.
Finding more multilingual literary pathways will benefit all of African—and world—literatures.