Riyad Mahrez is one of several French born footballers currently playing for African countries.
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In football, a number of African teams draw heavily on their European-born diasporas, a reflection of a colonial past and deeply entrenched migration routes.
Ghana is still finding ways of maximising its oil wealth.
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Oversight over how Ghana’s oil wealth is spent has become more important than ever.
A cabbage farmer in Kumasi prepares his land.
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Policies should protect arable land from urban encroachment and make peri-urban households less vulnerable.
Women spend considerable time finding water for their homes.
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The study confirms that collecting water for daily use weighs more heavily on women, making life more difficult for especially older women.
A radio announcer at work.
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News-making practices in private radio broadcasting in Ghana need a re-think.
Studying ancient African societies, like Great Zimbabwe, can reveal how communities dealt with disease and pandemics.
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Archaeologists have long studied diseases in past populations. They’ve explored the evolution of pathogens and how they interacted with humans.
Rains regularly displace thousands in Africa.
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Communities prepare better for flood disasters when they have been actively involved in communicating information.
Markets in Africa’s cities are central to the food chain. But many had to close because of COVID-19 measures.
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Safe rural migration programmes are not a substitute for formal social protection. But they could buy governments some time.
A member of the South African National Defence Force hands out pamphlets informing township residents about COVID-19 in Johannesburg.
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Ubuntu provides a language for people to participate in preventive action, even if this involves practices such as lockdowns.
The experiences of British based West African students can be improved.
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More can be done to ease transitions for West African students in the United Kingdom.
One of the first babies born on 1 January 2020 in Lagos, Nigeria.
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Unfortunately, disrespectful and neglectful treatment of women during childbirth, including verbal, physical and emotional abuse is not uncommon.
Women’s agency is still mired within wider structures of patriarchy and chronic poverty.
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Phones sometimes serve as a ‘digital leash’ to check women’s whereabouts - a growing feature of many relationships and conflicts.
Ghana has spent years developing a trusted justice system.
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The novel coronavirus has necessitated judicial reforms that should have been the norm.
A Ghanaian vegetable farmer sits on his land.
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And why development funders should listen to smallholder farmers
Somali women on a coronavirus awareness campaign.
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Some of the false claims about coronavirus may be harmless. But others can be potentially dangerous.
All Women Militarized Police Unit of the Ghana Police Service.
Instead of seeking to protect our health and stop the coronavirus epidemic by instituting totalitarian surveillance regimes, we should rather focus on empowering citizens.
Ghana’s forests require better care if cocoa farming is to be sustainable.
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The rising demand on the world market for cocoa has put pressure on Ghana’s forests.
An almost deserted highway in Accra
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A lockdown by itself is not a magic wand for fighting coronavirus.
The aviation industry is a key part of Ghana’s economic agenda.
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The coronavirus is stressing the continent’s aviation sector.
Elmina is one of the most important tourist sites in West Africa.
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The historic location provides a window into the potential of city tourism in Ghana.