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?For 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 By Thandwa MthembuResourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s futureThis 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 By Macenje “Che Che” MazokaInnovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar worldAfrican public intellectuals have repeatedly concerned themselves about how African societies can act with purpose and autonomy in a global system that has historically limited their choices By Eka IkpePartner ContentSouth Africa’s Youth Crisis Meets Action: Vaal EmpowaYouth Week Delivers Outcomes, Not PromisesBy Partner Content Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform By Wellington MuzengezaPresidential terms are to be extended to seven years, with Mnangagwa’s current tenure lengthened by two, while parliament and local government terms are similarly prolonged Welcome to the age of empireBy Donovan E WilliamsThe South African government has navigated this period remarkably well. It has not capitulated to any of the stronger blocs, whilst retaining its dignity and independent views The hidden hoaxer class outedBy Moshibudi MotimelePolitical entrepreneurs, while integrated and integral to both sides, are in the unique position in which they are neither. accountable to an electoral constituency nor the ground soldiers pulling triggers and exchanging envelopes Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 futureThis 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 By Macenje “Che Che” MazokaInnovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar worldAfrican public intellectuals have repeatedly concerned themselves about how African societies can act with purpose and autonomy in a global system that has historically limited their choices By Eka IkpePartner ContentSouth Africa’s Youth Crisis Meets Action: Vaal EmpowaYouth Week Delivers Outcomes, Not PromisesBy Partner Content Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform By Wellington MuzengezaPresidential terms are to be extended to seven years, with Mnangagwa’s current tenure lengthened by two, while parliament and local government terms are similarly prolonged Welcome to the age of empireBy Donovan E WilliamsThe South African government has navigated this period remarkably well. It has not capitulated to any of the stronger blocs, whilst retaining its dignity and independent views The hidden hoaxer class outedBy Moshibudi MotimelePolitical entrepreneurs, while integrated and integral to both sides, are in the unique position in which they are neither. accountable to an electoral constituency nor the ground soldiers pulling triggers and exchanging envelopes Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar worldAfrican public intellectuals have repeatedly concerned themselves about how African societies can act with purpose and autonomy in a global system that has historically limited their choices By Eka IkpePartner ContentSouth Africa’s Youth Crisis Meets Action: Vaal EmpowaYouth Week Delivers Outcomes, Not PromisesBy Partner Content
Partner ContentSouth Africa’s Youth Crisis Meets Action: Vaal EmpowaYouth Week Delivers Outcomes, Not PromisesBy Partner Content
Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform By Wellington MuzengezaPresidential terms are to be extended to seven years, with Mnangagwa’s current tenure lengthened by two, while parliament and local government terms are similarly prolonged Welcome to the age of empireBy Donovan E WilliamsThe South African government has navigated this period remarkably well. It has not capitulated to any of the stronger blocs, whilst retaining its dignity and independent views The hidden hoaxer class outedBy Moshibudi MotimelePolitical entrepreneurs, while integrated and integral to both sides, are in the unique position in which they are neither. accountable to an electoral constituency nor the ground soldiers pulling triggers and exchanging envelopes Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Welcome to the age of empireBy Donovan E WilliamsThe South African government has navigated this period remarkably well. It has not capitulated to any of the stronger blocs, whilst retaining its dignity and independent views The hidden hoaxer class outedBy Moshibudi MotimelePolitical entrepreneurs, while integrated and integral to both sides, are in the unique position in which they are neither. accountable to an electoral constituency nor the ground soldiers pulling triggers and exchanging envelopes Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 hidden hoaxer class outedBy Moshibudi MotimelePolitical entrepreneurs, while integrated and integral to both sides, are in the unique position in which they are neither. accountable to an electoral constituency nor the ground soldiers pulling triggers and exchanging envelopes Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Becoming Umwana – a sonBy Nelson GashagazaIn the ruins of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, Nelson Gashagaza survived by becoming someone else’s child. In this two-part series as Rwanda commemorates Kwibuka32, he tells a personal story on a performed kinship, ordinary horror and the meaning of belonging “You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
“You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate”By Funmi OlonisakinAs the global order becomes more multipolar, opportunities for African agency are expanding. Yet these opportunities will only translate into meaningful influence if African states strengthen their coordination, develop sophisticated negotiating strategies and engage proactively in shaping the rules of global governance The creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 creative power of liesBy Michael Brian LeeAmerica’s scale of its invented narratives are hard to match. Trump has normalised the idea that rhetorical bombast matters more than accuracy Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Beating rampant cybercrime in AfricaBy Helen GrangeMost cyberattacks succeed because they exploit human behaviour rather than technical weaknesses. Consumers are the frontline of defence against cybercrime Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Solitary superpower erodes global unityBy Imran KhalidThe message is unmistakable: allies must contribute to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran or face consequences for the partnership itself. Yet, as the conflict enters its fourth week, Trump appears increasingly comfortable with a go-it-alone strategy. The case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 case for the reform of the UNBy Seifudein AdemThe two proposals reveal that reform debates are marked by a deeper theoretical divergence over whether global legitimacy hinges on balancing power or modernising institutions. Africa’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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’s voice and power must be underpinned by dignityBy Shuvai NyoniFor many African public intellectuals such as Steve Biko, Leopold Senghor, Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah, political independence represented more than the transfer of formal authority from colonial administrations to newly sovereign states Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 }
Looking past the SANDF deployment to solve our crime crisis togetherBy Ian SiebörgerIt is also clear to many people, following revelations at the Madlanga Commission and corruption scandals in the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, that both the SAPS and SANDF are deeply compromised institutions in need of wholesale reform if South Africans’ trust in them is to be restored The widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More Latest News Hill-Lewis takes helm of DA leadership Homes are being stolen in plain sight Is state capture metamorphosing into higher education capture? Resourcing African agency: A practical agenda for the continent’s future “I leave the party intact,” says Steenhuisen as he steps down Resist pull of race-based politics, warns Helen Zille Innovation, preparedness and African agency in a multipolar world Zimbabwe’s jarring, phantom reform Welcome to the age of empire 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 widescale abuse of Ukraine’s children by the StateBy Gillian SchutteCoverage of Ukrainian children often fixes blame on Russia and leaves the conduct of the Ukrainian government in the background, even though the evidence of exploitation, forced separation, weak oversight and institutional damage inside Ukraine’s own system is extensive and public Load More