A transgender woman at a safe house supporting LGBTQ residents in Kampala, Uganda. Anti-gay laws make certain homosexual relationships punishable by death.
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Stigmatised people living with HIV often suffer from fear, depression and abuse. It’s sometimes easier to stop a treatment regime than risk being ostracised or assaulted by the community.
Great Blue Turaco in Kibale National Park in Uganda.
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Digital tax filing can improve accuracy and timeliness but it doesn’t always translate into higher tax revenue.
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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Ben Jones, University of East Anglia and Lucy Njogu, University of East Anglia
In this area, much of the work of being educated is only indirectly tied to the schooling experience.
Relatives of victims in Uganda mourning the victims of a brutal attack by suspected extremist rebels that left at least 40 people dead, including many schoolchildren.
AP/Alamy
A scholar of politics and religion explains how anti-LGBTQ laws are being used to distract the public from governance failures in many parts of the world.
Paul Kagame at a commemoration of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda in April 2023.
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Health workers with relatives in positions of power were frequently absent from work.
A witness cries while giving testimony in a trial against former Guatemalan dictator Gen. José Efraín Ríos Montt in 2013.
Johan Ordonez/AFP via Getty Images)
The success of the Ugandan dance troupe offers a chance to discuss the harms of institutional care.
Refugees who crossed from Sudan to Ethiopia wait in line to register at the International Organization for Migration at Metema on May 4, 2023.
Photo by AMANUEL SILESHI/AFP via Getty Images
In March, Albanese joined 50,000 people to march in support of queer rights. At the same time, in another part of the world, Uganda passed a string of draconian anti-gay laws.