NoViolet Bulawayo, Zimbabwean author of the politically charged novels We Need New Names and Glory.
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Writers have challenged oppression, exposed social injustices and advocated for political change.
Refugees, some of them children, in Hargeisa, Somaliland.
EDUARDO SOTERAS/AFP via Getty Images
Exploring the potential intersections between climate change and violence against children is crucial.
Thandi Galleta of Malawi (right) and Karin Burger of New Zealand in a 2023 World Cup warm up match in Cape Town.
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The world’s largest women’s sporting event is being hosted in Africa for the first time.
Barbra Banda (front right) and her Zambian teammates celebrate a friendly win over Germany.
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Nigeria leads in the rankings of the four African teams. Two others are making debut World Cup appearances and there’s a storm cloud over South Africa.
There’s been improvements in sexual and reproductive health outcomes.
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The success of the Maputo Protocol in protecting the rights of women and eliminating discrimination is remarkable.
I Write Into the Yawning Void is Magona’s new book, released in the year she turns 80. Björn Rudner.
Björn Rudman
From domestic worker to matriarch of South African literature, the book is a reflection on her writing journey.
Paulina Chiziane in Portugal after being awarded the Camões Prize for writers from Portuguese-speaking countries.
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The Camões Prize is the most important award for Portuguese literature, and Paulina Chiziane is the first African woman to receive it.
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Studies show unisex toilets don’t lead to violence – and they create a safer space for gender diverse people.
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Kenya’s experienced fast population growth and urbanisation - this has brought about some big challenges.
A still from the documentary about growing up in South Africa.
Milisuthando/Rob Pollock/Francis Burger
Opening the Encounters documentary festival in South Africa, the film has received international praise.
South Africa’s healthcare system has gaps in providing HIV treatment to highly mobile women.
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The vulnerability of migrants was highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic when restrictions affected people’s ability to travel to access treatment.
Ama Ata Aidoo passed away at the age of 81.
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A commanding presence on the global literary stage, Ama Ata Aidoo was a powerful feminist voice with a prolific output.
Ghanaian-born curator of the biennale, Lesley Lokko.
Jacopo Salvi/La Biennale di Venezia
The Venice Architecture Biennale has an African curator for the first time this year – and a shift in focus.
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In addition to motherhood these girls experience social inequality, chronic stress, violence, and food insecurity. When teenagers become mothers, their adversities are compounded.
Nelson Mandela and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela at home in 1990.
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Jonny Steinberg talks about his intimate double biography of the famous South African leaders.
Former South African constitutional court judge, Yvonne Mokgoro.
Vathiswa Ruselo/Sowetan
Justice Mokgoro’s advocacy for group solidarity and reconciliation is discernible in several of her judgments.
Detail of an illustration of Theodosia Okoh, who designed Ghana’s flag.
Illustrations by Denyse Gawu-Mensah/Black and Bold Queens
Women who shaped modern Ghana have been erased from history. A children’s book aims to restore them to their rightful place.
Cleopatra (centre) is played by a black actress, Adele James, in the new Netflix docudrama series.
Image courtesy Netflix
The ethnicity outcry says more about today’s preoccupations with race than ancient Egypt’s.
Detail from the cover of the children’s book Kayo’s House by Ugandan author Barbara Kimenye.
Macmillan/Mactracks Series
At independence, adults were reading decolonial classics - but children were reading Enid Blyton. A generation of unsung women writers changed that.
Detail from the cover of an edition of Amma Darko’s novel Faceless.
Sub-Saharan Publishers
A psychologist and a literary scholar analyse Faceless, a powerful novel about homeless children - and their mothers.