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African Arguments

  • Debating Ideas
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      • Cameroon
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Society

Home›African Arguments›Category: "Society" (Page 14)
  • Burkina Faso's coup leaders on RTB, the national broadcaster.
    Burkina FasoPoliticsSociety

    Burkina Faso’s battle for the airwaves

    By Emma Heywood, Emmanuel Klimis, Lassané Yaméogo & Marie Fierens
    February 7, 2022
    One of the first things the coup leaders on taking power this January was to restore the internet and surround the national broadcaster with tanks. ...
    Read More
  • Abubaker walks with three of his kids. He had a vasectomy in secret because he decided it was time to stop having children. Credit: Edna Namara/Global Press Journal.
    GPJSocietyUgandaZimbabwe

    “It was time I took responsibility”: The men getting vasectomies

    By Edna Namara & Evidence Chenjerai
    February 3, 2022
    More men are starting to push back against misconceptions about the procedure, opening up more possibilities for family planning. Three years ago, Abubaker overheard ...
    Read More
  • The forced eviction of Otodo Gbame, Lagos, in April 2017. Credit: Justice & Empowerment Initiative.
    FellowsNigeriaSociety

    “The scramble for Lagos” and the urban poor’s fight for their homes

    By Ope Adetayo
    January 26, 2022
    Nigeria’s smallest yet most populous state continues to destroy informal settlements in defiance of the courts. On the night of 8 April 2017, the ...
    Read More
  • Allen Asimwe, left, plaits hair at the salon she opened six years ago to supplement her income teaching high school geography in Kampala, Uganda on October 26, 2021. Since Uganda’s government is raising salaries only for science-oriented teachers, she has decided it makes more sense to focus on clients than students. Credit: Edna Namara/Global Press Journal.
    GPJSocietyUganda

    Uganda’s tripling of salaries for STEM teachers delights and divides

    By Edna Namara & Patricia Lindrio
    January 25, 2022
    The pay rise for educators in science-related fields has left arts and humanities teachers feeling spurned. Will students suffer for it? Allen Asimwe, 54, ...
    Read More
  • High school students sit an exam in Rivercess County, Liberia. Credit: Faces – Together Liberia – Bruce Strong.
    LiberiaSociety

    Liberia’s scrapping of tuition fees splits opinion

    By Dounard Bondo
    January 20, 2022
    Liberia’s free education policies seem to have alleviated one big problem but exacerbated another. For much of Charles’ time as a school student, his ...
    Read More
  • The 8 December 2021 protest by the media against state-led press repression in Sudan. Credit: Ayin.
    Editor's PicksSocietySudan

    “Back to the former lies”: Sudan reverts to media repression post-coup

    By Elzahraa Jadallah, Khaled Fathi & Tom Rhodes
    December 16, 2021
    When the military seized power on 25 October, one of the first casualties was Sudan’s newfound freedom of expression. On 17 November, journalist Ali ...
    Read More
  • Covid-19SocietySouth Africa

    Archiving micro-kindnesses and everyday heroism in South Africa

    By Jess Auerbach
    December 10, 2021
    2021 has been a hard year in South Africa and everyday people have taken strain. But it’s easy to forget that, amidst the multitude ...
    Read More
  • A Kenyan secondary boarding school soon after it was burnt down. Credit: Elizabeth Cooper.
    KenyaSociety

    Kenyan students keep setting their schools on fire. Where’s the alarm?

    By Elizabeth Cooper
    December 8, 2021
    Students setting dozens if not hundreds of schools on fire each year is no longer surprising. What’s shocking is the government’s apathy. When the ...
    Read More
  • NigeriaPodcastSociety

    Queen Amina to #EndSARS: An audio journey through Nigeria’s history

    By Lanaire Aderemi
    December 2, 2021
    story story pod is a four-part audio series on forgotten Nigerian histories, transporting listeners through time using immersive storytelling and powerful soundscapes. Whilst shared ...
    Read More
  • Trinity Ncube is a volunteer Occupational Therapist (OT). She helps patients regain skills needed in everyday life at the COVID-19 Field Hospital in Nasrec, Johannesburg, South Africa. Credit: IMF Photo/James Oatway.
    Covid-19SocietySouth AfricaTop story

    Rich countries can’t feign shock if the next variant goes undetected

    By Jess Auerbach
    November 29, 2021
    South Africa’s openness helps the world’s pandemic response. The Global North’s rejection of WHO advice in imposing travel bans endangers it. As southern African ...
    Read More
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