Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s MagaBy Ncebakazi MakwetuThe two are a mirror of one another.When democracy declines, societies become divided by race, religion and ethnicity. Leaders tolerate or encourage violence to further their own interests
The country’s shame and Africa’s failureThe images are painfully familiar. A mob storms into a tiny spaza shop in Soweto. Shelves are inspected like contraband checkpoints. Foreign shopkeepers are interrogated by self-appointed patriots masquerading as law enforcers. Threats are issued. Deadlines are given. Leave, or else. This is not law enforcement. It is political thuggery. But if Africa wants an […] By Jack McbramsMeasuring dignity in conditions of captivityNakba Day invites all of us to think about belonging, about how we treat those who we think do not belong and about the importance of rules in the negotiation of spaces of belonging. Every 15 May the world marks Nakba Day, when mass displacement of Palestinians and the destruction of Palestinian life and homeland […] By Verne Harris and Samantha MashapaHope for vital Zambian wetlandOver the years working with communities across Zambia’s expansive Kafue Flats, I have seen first-hand how deeply people’s lives and culture are tied to this vast wetland. Families depend on its waters for fish, grazing land for livestock and fertile soils for farming that sustain livelihoods and economies. While it is home to the endangered Wattled […] By Mwape SichilongoPartner ContentLand reform and rural development: A budget for South Africa’s bold agenda for land reform and rural renewalBy Partner Content Africa’s AI future won’t be borrowedBy Ziaad SulemanAfrican governments generate vast quantities of citizen data, from health records to tax filings, land registries and school enrolments. Much of it leaves the continent to be processed, modelled and monetised on foreign infrastructure. The insight comes back at a premium, while the economic value remains elsewhere — and AI is accelerating this. However, this […] CAF complicit in South African football suffering continental gamesmanship, often off-fieldBy Lelo MzacaFootball should reward skill, not survival of the shrewdest. South African teams offer professionalism and infrastructure that uplift the continent. Allowing gamesmanship to thrive diminishes all of that. CAF owes African football’s integrity a level playing field. If not, South African sides have every right to fight fire with calculated, rules-based fire Bafana Bafana: A squad built for more than just participationBy Lelo MzacaThe current squad stands out as one of the most impressive in recent memory. Its strength draws heavily from the domestic powerhouse clubs From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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. 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Measuring dignity in conditions of captivityNakba Day invites all of us to think about belonging, about how we treat those who we think do not belong and about the importance of rules in the negotiation of spaces of belonging. Every 15 May the world marks Nakba Day, when mass displacement of Palestinians and the destruction of Palestinian life and homeland […] By Verne Harris and Samantha MashapaHope for vital Zambian wetlandOver the years working with communities across Zambia’s expansive Kafue Flats, I have seen first-hand how deeply people’s lives and culture are tied to this vast wetland. Families depend on its waters for fish, grazing land for livestock and fertile soils for farming that sustain livelihoods and economies. While it is home to the endangered Wattled […] By Mwape SichilongoPartner ContentLand reform and rural development: A budget for South Africa’s bold agenda for land reform and rural renewalBy Partner Content Africa’s AI future won’t be borrowedBy Ziaad SulemanAfrican governments generate vast quantities of citizen data, from health records to tax filings, land registries and school enrolments. Much of it leaves the continent to be processed, modelled and monetised on foreign infrastructure. The insight comes back at a premium, while the economic value remains elsewhere — and AI is accelerating this. However, this […] CAF complicit in South African football suffering continental gamesmanship, often off-fieldBy Lelo MzacaFootball should reward skill, not survival of the shrewdest. South African teams offer professionalism and infrastructure that uplift the continent. Allowing gamesmanship to thrive diminishes all of that. CAF owes African football’s integrity a level playing field. If not, South African sides have every right to fight fire with calculated, rules-based fire Bafana Bafana: A squad built for more than just participationBy Lelo MzacaThe current squad stands out as one of the most impressive in recent memory. Its strength draws heavily from the domestic powerhouse clubs From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
Hope for vital Zambian wetlandOver the years working with communities across Zambia’s expansive Kafue Flats, I have seen first-hand how deeply people’s lives and culture are tied to this vast wetland. Families depend on its waters for fish, grazing land for livestock and fertile soils for farming that sustain livelihoods and economies. While it is home to the endangered Wattled […] By Mwape SichilongoPartner ContentLand reform and rural development: A budget for South Africa’s bold agenda for land reform and rural renewalBy Partner Content
Partner ContentLand reform and rural development: A budget for South Africa’s bold agenda for land reform and rural renewalBy Partner Content
Africa’s AI future won’t be borrowedBy Ziaad SulemanAfrican governments generate vast quantities of citizen data, from health records to tax filings, land registries and school enrolments. Much of it leaves the continent to be processed, modelled and monetised on foreign infrastructure. The insight comes back at a premium, while the economic value remains elsewhere — and AI is accelerating this. However, this […] CAF complicit in South African football suffering continental gamesmanship, often off-fieldBy Lelo MzacaFootball should reward skill, not survival of the shrewdest. South African teams offer professionalism and infrastructure that uplift the continent. Allowing gamesmanship to thrive diminishes all of that. CAF owes African football’s integrity a level playing field. If not, South African sides have every right to fight fire with calculated, rules-based fire Bafana Bafana: A squad built for more than just participationBy Lelo MzacaThe current squad stands out as one of the most impressive in recent memory. Its strength draws heavily from the domestic powerhouse clubs From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
CAF complicit in South African football suffering continental gamesmanship, often off-fieldBy Lelo MzacaFootball should reward skill, not survival of the shrewdest. South African teams offer professionalism and infrastructure that uplift the continent. Allowing gamesmanship to thrive diminishes all of that. CAF owes African football’s integrity a level playing field. If not, South African sides have every right to fight fire with calculated, rules-based fire Bafana Bafana: A squad built for more than just participationBy Lelo MzacaThe current squad stands out as one of the most impressive in recent memory. Its strength draws heavily from the domestic powerhouse clubs From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
Bafana Bafana: A squad built for more than just participationBy Lelo MzacaThe current squad stands out as one of the most impressive in recent memory. Its strength draws heavily from the domestic powerhouse clubs From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
From migration pressure to development architecture: Why Africa needs an economic diplomacy frameworkBy Lehlohonolo Gabriel MambonaAt present, most policy responses remain fragmented. Governments focus on border enforcement, documentation systems, policing and short-term political responses. Yet these interventions rarely address the structural drivers behind migration flows Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
Ending hunger in Africa needs Africa-led science and the governance to matchBy Scott DrimieOn World Hunger Day on 28 May, it is important to point out that more than one in five people in Africa go hungry today, and nearly six in 10 face moderate or severe food insecurity. Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
Pope Leo’s AI encyclical and the urgent need for human leadershipBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahHe warns against reducing people to measurable outputs, predictive profiles or behavioural categories. Once technology becomes the standard by which human beings are judged, it no longer serves human development; it begins to reshape society according to its own logic The brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 brilliance of Iran’s governance structureBy Gillian SchutteThe sheer brilliance of Iran’s three-tiered governance structure Africa Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 Day and the measure of a continentBy Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahAfrica Day should not be observed merely as a ritual of speeches and nostalgia. It should be approached as a test. Africa at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 at the forefront: The urgent need to diversify energy supplyBy Dele KutiThe African continent has long played a secondary role in shaping global events, energy being one of the main characteristics of this subsidiary role. We now can play a role in helping to choose the direction of global decision-making The architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 architecture of protection: Moving from technical fixes to systemic whistleblower reformBy Karam SinghBy shifting our focus towards the establishment of a Public Whistleblower Authority, aligning this architecture with any future anti-corruption agency, introducing real monetary incentives and convening an immediate national engagement to iron out these mechanics, we can ensure that the state finally shares the risk borne by those who speak the truth. UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
UAE ramps up African infrastructure investment as Gulf states compete for trade influenceBy Nkateko Joseph MabasaThe Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is accelerating oversight of large road projects in Togo, Madagascar and Nigeria as Gulf states expand strategic infrastructure investments across Africa amid rising geopolitical tension and global trade disruptions PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More Latest News Denying SA is xenophobic: sounds like Trump’s Maga Nduduzo Makhathini is not playing alone ANCWL buddies turn against Tolashe Sibanyoni granted bail as NPA revives extortion case The country’s shame and Africa’s failure Ghana repatriates 300 citizens from SA Côte d’Ivoire is more than a stopover. It’s a story you travel through Measuring dignity in conditions of captivity ‘Atlas of Uncertainty’ reimagines the African city through art and flux 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 }
PAP, Traoré and the farce of Pan-Africanism without powerBy Gillian SchutteThe farce lies in the performance of Pan-Africanism without power. It lies in institutions that speak of unity while African economies remain exposed to rating agencies, foreign currencies, creditor punishments and donor instructions. It lies in regional bodies that discipline disobedient states while tolerating client regimes that sell their people into permanent dependency Load More