Without Integration Africa is Doomed
The real deal lies in the African people, the human and intellectual resources of the continent.
The real deal lies in the African people, the human and intellectual resources of the continent.
The African continent remains hostage to myriad forces, both internally generated and externally produced. True Uhuru has eluded the continent for more than half-century now.
1960 is considered the year of independence for Africa. More than a dozen states gained sovereign status in that year alone. The winds of change
When writing about Africa, the Western media (and academia) almost always never fail to underline three things that supposedly define the continent: war, poverty and
In a series of incisive Tweets on 14 April, the indefatigable Dr Godwin Murunga dissected what he summarised as ‘Perils of Afrophilia in African Studies.’
The Covid-19 pandemic has yet again cast the spotlight on an old fact: that Africa occupies the lowest rungs of global power structures and domination.
The recent flare up in Mozambique is only one of the many conflict hotspots on the African continent that cast a grim picture on the
A perceptive graduate student reminded me in class recently that the United States government spends billions of dollars in subsidies, tax exemptions and aid to
Pan-Africanism has lately become the object of derision and denigration, partly understandable but largely mistaken. Among the legion of pro-democracy advocates active on the streets
The role of Western foreign aid in Africa has recently returned to the centre of animated debates. This is an old debate, recast anew in
The real deal lies in the African people, the human and intellectual resources of the continent.
The African continent remains hostage to myriad forces, both internally generated and externally produced. True Uhuru has eluded the continent for more than half-century now.
1960 is considered the year of independence for Africa. More than a dozen states gained sovereign status in that year alone. The winds of change
When writing about Africa, the Western media (and academia) almost always never fail to underline three things that supposedly define the continent: war, poverty and
In a series of incisive Tweets on 14 April, the indefatigable Dr Godwin Murunga dissected what he summarised as ‘Perils of Afrophilia in African Studies.’
The Covid-19 pandemic has yet again cast the spotlight on an old fact: that Africa occupies the lowest rungs of global power structures and domination.
The recent flare up in Mozambique is only one of the many conflict hotspots on the African continent that cast a grim picture on the
A perceptive graduate student reminded me in class recently that the United States government spends billions of dollars in subsidies, tax exemptions and aid to
Pan-Africanism has lately become the object of derision and denigration, partly understandable but largely mistaken. Among the legion of pro-democracy advocates active on the streets
The role of Western foreign aid in Africa has recently returned to the centre of animated debates. This is an old debate, recast anew in
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Part of the problem facing Africa is that the agency to articulate the trials and tribulations of Africans has for long been usurped by foreigners. As a principle, everyone should get involved in debates on Africa, of course. However, rather than Read more