Neil Agget’s passionate trade unionism proved fateful. It made him a target of a brutally repressive apartheid police state.
The celebrated South African architect Sumayya Vally is the artistic director of the exhibition.
Carter’s work in Zimbabwe forms a significant and under appreciated part of his legacy
Major League Soccer is the most diverse league in the US. Its predecessor, the NASL, led the way.
Gan Siyabonga is unique in Israel. It highlights a group that was both anti-apartheid and pro-Zionist.
The pain of a brutal past and how to find healing is a theme shared between African Americans and black South Africans.
He failed to understand that the struggle for justice and freedom in southern Africa was changing the world - and diplomacy itself.
Smart, capable students struggled to navigate cultural and language norms in university accounting classrooms.
A 1971 law, and the parallel growth of an illegal economy, shaped South Africa’s unique cannabis landscape.
These vibrant writers embrace the open road and claim spaces that were denied them during apartheid.
The relationship between Pretoria and Moscow was forged in the apartheid era with the then Soviet Union giving support to banned ANC fighters.
Cole was a master of portraying the violence of apartheid through scenes of everyday life.
A powerful new book restores the writer and feminist politician to her rightful place in history.
Challenging myths about heterosexual white South African men, Prinsloo published four books of short stories in 12 years.
The activist is today the subject of songs, sculptures, an annual lecture and even a new musical.
South Africa’s policies need to do more to protect vulnerable and marginalised small-scale fishers and fishing communities.
Hollywood undermines Africa’s struggles, creating a false impression of the continent to please western viewers.
The Drum journalist was a rare woman in a male-dominated world. Her autobiography has now been published after her death.
Soon after it was established in 1932 Orlando became a mecca of black urban culture and liberation politics.
The 1986 research revealed that a large proportion of the community members surveyed thought that Wits served mainly white, corporate interests.