Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2By Nelson GashagazaThe family who sheltered me was, by any measure, participating in genocide: they were killing Tutsi every day. They were also, in their own logic, maintaining a family, going to work, returning home, sitting down to eat. These things coexisted
Africa’s unfinished reckoningThe question is not whether the world recognises the genocide against the Tutsi. It does. The question is whether the continent has claimed it — intellectually, historically and in its understanding of itself By Albert RudatsimburwaEskom still backbone of economic recovery Reliable and affordable energy, with predictable tariffs, is indispensable. Even so, it is significant that Eskom’s leadership recognises the central role it plays: without this backbone, large-scale manufacturing and job creation cannot exist By Vuslat BayogluThe DA’s colour conundrumCan the party construct a narrative that acknowledges its past while speaking to the aspirations of a diverse and changing society? Its ability to do so may depend on its willingness to engage with the discomfort of its own history and the expectations of its evolving constituency By Mpumezo RaloPartner ContentSAB spotlights South African women restoring water systems through invasive species clearing in the Western CapeBy Partner Content Dangers of killing peacekeepersBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahEach unaddressed attack undermines the UN’s legitimacy and reinforces perceptions of impotence Voter education made easyBy William GumedeAll voter education must include democratic civic education, an understanding of key aspects of democracy, including the Constitution, human rights, democratic moral values, diversity, gender equality and the responsibilities of democratic citizenship Paid the ultimate price, only for a half-baked BillBy Rupert CandyJohn MakateThe new whistleblower Bill is progressive but the consultation period (which closes on 14 May 2024) should be used to push for improved legal aid access, stronger independent support structures, robust data security, additional support measures and pre-emptive protections South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Eskom still backbone of economic recovery Reliable and affordable energy, with predictable tariffs, is indispensable. Even so, it is significant that Eskom’s leadership recognises the central role it plays: without this backbone, large-scale manufacturing and job creation cannot exist By Vuslat BayogluThe DA’s colour conundrumCan the party construct a narrative that acknowledges its past while speaking to the aspirations of a diverse and changing society? Its ability to do so may depend on its willingness to engage with the discomfort of its own history and the expectations of its evolving constituency By Mpumezo RaloPartner ContentSAB spotlights South African women restoring water systems through invasive species clearing in the Western CapeBy Partner Content Dangers of killing peacekeepersBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahEach unaddressed attack undermines the UN’s legitimacy and reinforces perceptions of impotence Voter education made easyBy William GumedeAll voter education must include democratic civic education, an understanding of key aspects of democracy, including the Constitution, human rights, democratic moral values, diversity, gender equality and the responsibilities of democratic citizenship Paid the ultimate price, only for a half-baked BillBy Rupert CandyJohn MakateThe new whistleblower Bill is progressive but the consultation period (which closes on 14 May 2024) should be used to push for improved legal aid access, stronger independent support structures, robust data security, additional support measures and pre-emptive protections South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
The DA’s colour conundrumCan the party construct a narrative that acknowledges its past while speaking to the aspirations of a diverse and changing society? Its ability to do so may depend on its willingness to engage with the discomfort of its own history and the expectations of its evolving constituency By Mpumezo RaloPartner ContentSAB spotlights South African women restoring water systems through invasive species clearing in the Western CapeBy Partner Content
Partner ContentSAB spotlights South African women restoring water systems through invasive species clearing in the Western CapeBy Partner Content
Dangers of killing peacekeepersBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahEach unaddressed attack undermines the UN’s legitimacy and reinforces perceptions of impotence Voter education made easyBy William GumedeAll voter education must include democratic civic education, an understanding of key aspects of democracy, including the Constitution, human rights, democratic moral values, diversity, gender equality and the responsibilities of democratic citizenship Paid the ultimate price, only for a half-baked BillBy Rupert CandyJohn MakateThe new whistleblower Bill is progressive but the consultation period (which closes on 14 May 2024) should be used to push for improved legal aid access, stronger independent support structures, robust data security, additional support measures and pre-emptive protections South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Voter education made easyBy William GumedeAll voter education must include democratic civic education, an understanding of key aspects of democracy, including the Constitution, human rights, democratic moral values, diversity, gender equality and the responsibilities of democratic citizenship Paid the ultimate price, only for a half-baked BillBy Rupert CandyJohn MakateThe new whistleblower Bill is progressive but the consultation period (which closes on 14 May 2024) should be used to push for improved legal aid access, stronger independent support structures, robust data security, additional support measures and pre-emptive protections South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Paid the ultimate price, only for a half-baked BillBy Rupert CandyJohn MakateThe new whistleblower Bill is progressive but the consultation period (which closes on 14 May 2024) should be used to push for improved legal aid access, stronger independent support structures, robust data security, additional support measures and pre-emptive protections South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
South Africa’s universities are outgrowing a transition-era governance settlementBy Fulufhelo NemavholaUniversities now operate amid electricity instability, water risk, municipal decay, crime, cyber vulnerability and public distrust The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
The Iran War is Africa’s warning: Build sovereignty or be ruled by other people’s powerBy Faiez JacobsA country that exports minerals but imports industrial dependence is not sovereign in any deep sense. A country that sits on energy resources but cannot convert them into stable power, strategic reserves, industrial feedstock, jobs and technological upgrading is not sovereign in any deep sense South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
South Africa’s investment drive is rebuilding the economyBy Cornelius MonamaIn an era when cynicism too often dominates public discourse and doubt easily overshadows progress, the facts speak volumes. South Africa is attracting capital, rebuilding confidence and laying the foundations for a new era of industrialisation, energy security and inclusive growth Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Africa must address the strategic impact of drones on future wars to preserve peaceBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahNew and emerging technologies should serve peace, not conflict University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
University capture: A decades-long problemBy Grant AbbottPrevious councils failed to act and hold the vice-chancellor accountable. They bear responsibility for many of the challenges now facing Fort Hare Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Andile Mngxitama’s inconsistency and the politics of denigration and opportunismBy Sipho SingiswaI remain close to the places where ordinary black life meets the police, the farmer, the mine and the state face to face. That ground has no patience for fashionable radicalism. That ground exposes every counterfeit. Speaking from the safety of a donor-funded human rights NGO is ‘Butlerism’ on steroids. So is abandoning the Black Land First formation for the security of a career in Parliament Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Homes are being stolen in plain sightBy Ash MüllerFrom forged documents to double sales, property fraud is a growing concern in South Africa. Even registered homes aren’t always safe Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture?By Thandwa MthembuFor all we know, the higher education sector might even have some senior managers who aid and abet institutional capture, just like the Madlanga Commission has outed some high-ranking police officers alleged to have facilitated police capture Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More Latest News Litchi HOV on dance, inheritance and refusing to quit Exclusive: Club Med deal exposes IDC governance failures Becoming umwana – a son: Part 2 What does it mean to forgive? A play asks, 30 years after the TRC EMPD and the missing R14m lithium Malema avoids jail for now Africa’s unfinished reckoning Hunt on for PIC’s lost billions Manana and the art of trusting the process Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureBy Macenje “Che Che” MazokaThis influence goes beyond funding. It shows up in how systems for decision-making are designed, how public policies are shaped and even who sits at the table. Over time, this creates a situation where African initiatives remain African in name but are partly shaped by external actors in how they function Load More