Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yokeBy Babar DharaniTwo of the continent’s premier game reserves – Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve and South Africa’s Kruger National Park – stand on the frontlines of species loss, working tirelessly to protect wildlife under the shadow of rising extinction threats. Yet they also reveal how different leadership approaches to park management can shape conservation success, advance inclusivity, and distribute economic benefit to local communities.
Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagionThe Kenyan court’s decision should be read well beyond Kenya. Across Africa, governments will need to negotiate such arrangements with greater care, more transparency and a firmer sense of constitutional discipline and national interest By Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAre Africans welcome at the World Cup?African music megastars Tyla and Rema are scheduled to perform at the World Cup’s opening ceremony in Los Angeles. But while African music and soccer are welcome at the tournament, many African fans and journalists, it would seem, are not. By Vincent Sima Ole and Ahmar MaigaPresident Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliverMigration outcomes are largely determined by the quality of the systems into which migrants enter. When any one of the systems underperforms, the pressures become amplified. When several fail simultaneously, migration become politically explosive By Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaPartner ContentBMW CEO says technical skills are key to South Africa’s future workforceBy Hasina Kathrada The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World CupBy Lelo MzacaFor millions of fans, a familiar cloud of anxiety looms — not over tactics or form but over something far more basic: whether players will be paid what they are owed by their football federations Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa?By Thembinkosi T TwaloThe lack of clarity about which foreigners must go has translated into the victimisation of some who are not targets, including South Africans who look like those who are unwelcome Nigeria’s perilous French gambitBy Adekeye AdebajoNigeria’s increasingly close relationship with France marks a departure from six decades of foreign policy aimed at reducing French influence in West Africa. An increasingly close relationship with a power that has long sought to undermine Nigerian influence in West Africa will benefit only politically connected business elites. Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Are Africans welcome at the World Cup?African music megastars Tyla and Rema are scheduled to perform at the World Cup’s opening ceremony in Los Angeles. But while African music and soccer are welcome at the tournament, many African fans and journalists, it would seem, are not. By Vincent Sima Ole and Ahmar MaigaPresident Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliverMigration outcomes are largely determined by the quality of the systems into which migrants enter. When any one of the systems underperforms, the pressures become amplified. When several fail simultaneously, migration become politically explosive By Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaPartner ContentBMW CEO says technical skills are key to South Africa’s future workforceBy Hasina Kathrada The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World CupBy Lelo MzacaFor millions of fans, a familiar cloud of anxiety looms — not over tactics or form but over something far more basic: whether players will be paid what they are owed by their football federations Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa?By Thembinkosi T TwaloThe lack of clarity about which foreigners must go has translated into the victimisation of some who are not targets, including South Africans who look like those who are unwelcome Nigeria’s perilous French gambitBy Adekeye AdebajoNigeria’s increasingly close relationship with France marks a departure from six decades of foreign policy aimed at reducing French influence in West Africa. An increasingly close relationship with a power that has long sought to undermine Nigerian influence in West Africa will benefit only politically connected business elites. Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliverMigration outcomes are largely determined by the quality of the systems into which migrants enter. When any one of the systems underperforms, the pressures become amplified. When several fail simultaneously, migration become politically explosive By Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaPartner ContentBMW CEO says technical skills are key to South Africa’s future workforceBy Hasina Kathrada
Partner ContentBMW CEO says technical skills are key to South Africa’s future workforceBy Hasina Kathrada
The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World CupBy Lelo MzacaFor millions of fans, a familiar cloud of anxiety looms — not over tactics or form but over something far more basic: whether players will be paid what they are owed by their football federations Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa?By Thembinkosi T TwaloThe lack of clarity about which foreigners must go has translated into the victimisation of some who are not targets, including South Africans who look like those who are unwelcome Nigeria’s perilous French gambitBy Adekeye AdebajoNigeria’s increasingly close relationship with France marks a departure from six decades of foreign policy aimed at reducing French influence in West Africa. An increasingly close relationship with a power that has long sought to undermine Nigerian influence in West Africa will benefit only politically connected business elites. Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa?By Thembinkosi T TwaloThe lack of clarity about which foreigners must go has translated into the victimisation of some who are not targets, including South Africans who look like those who are unwelcome Nigeria’s perilous French gambitBy Adekeye AdebajoNigeria’s increasingly close relationship with France marks a departure from six decades of foreign policy aimed at reducing French influence in West Africa. An increasingly close relationship with a power that has long sought to undermine Nigerian influence in West Africa will benefit only politically connected business elites. Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Nigeria’s perilous French gambitBy Adekeye AdebajoNigeria’s increasingly close relationship with France marks a departure from six decades of foreign policy aimed at reducing French influence in West Africa. An increasingly close relationship with a power that has long sought to undermine Nigerian influence in West Africa will benefit only politically connected business elites. Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Violent attacks on black African migrants will not resolve national employment crisisBy Khwezi MabasaSouth Africa has a structural unemployment problem that is not primarily caused by increased labour migration. Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Injustices, civil society and the baseless anti-development rhetoricBy Siphesihle MvundlaCSOs and community organisations are portrayed as enemies of development whenever they challenge powerful political and economic interests Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Marine carbon dioxide removal: Our next ocean science, policy and governance frontier?By Pedro MonteiroOn World Oceans Day, celebrated on 8 June each year, it’s important to recognise that the ocean does extraordinary work. It stores 98% of all CO2 on the planet, absorbs at least a quarter of all human-made CO2 emissions annually and soaks up at least 90% of the excess heat generated by the emissions. It is the flywheel of the global climate Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Marble Towers part of a bigger storyBy Ash MüllerUnauthorised building alterations, illegal structures, safety violations and neglected compliance requirements are hardly unique to one property in Johannesburg’s city centre When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
When migration becomes a municipal crisis: The local face of a continental challengeBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaIn South Africa, where local government is grappling with fiscal constraints, infrastructure backlogs, unemployment and service delivery problems, migration has become an additional layer of complexity that many municipalities were never designed to manage The cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 cheapest climate defence we have is in the groundBy Kishaylin ChettyOur wetlands, grasslands, rivers and the wildlife that hold them together are not a luxury to be funded once the urgent problems are solved. They are part of how we solve the urgent problems World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
World Environment Day: The great AI-climate paradoxBy Blessing AfolayanThe very tool being counted on to decarbonise our civilisation is fast becoming one of the most power-hungry infrastructure networks on Earth. Yet dismissing AI as a climate villain is to miss one of the most consequential opportunities of the decade Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Citizens don’t want these political fakesBy Donovan E WilliamsMany across the Global South created grassroots movements that were morally-centred and people-led to fight colonialism and apartheid but we cannot seem to create similar movements when leaders take us backwards Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More Latest News Murders in Gauteng decrease while sexual assault and kidnapping trend upwards Joburg ANC mayoral process faces scrutiny amid claims of flawed nomination process Africa’s conservation models struggle to shake colonial yoke Kenya’s Ebola case and the politics of contagion Are Africans welcome at the World Cup? President Ramaphosa’s migration speech gets the diagnosis right: The real test is whether South Africa has the system to deliver The anxious money wait: Why African soccer fans dread payment disputes before major tournaments like the Fifa World Cup Which foreigners are unwelcome in South Africa? The president has spoken but whether he can deliver hangs in the balance 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 }
Ramaphosa and the ANC’s sinking shipBy Siyanda KateThere is sufficient evidence to suggest that Ramaphosa will not save the ANC and may instead be presiding over a sinking ship. Under his leadership, the party suffered its most significant electoral setback since 1994 Load More