The Master of Science in Global Health Delivery Class of 2018.
Photo by Jean Christophe Kitoko for UGHE
Many health professionals leave Africa because they don’t know how to handle the non-clinical systemic problems.
Women in Ghana.
There's heavy burden for women in Ghana who don't have children.
Can South Africa keep the lights on?
flickr/ Paul Saad
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s pronouncements on the power utility Eskom, during the State of the Nation Address may lead to significant changes in country’s energy policy.
Liberia’s President George Weah has ruffled feathers by proposing changes to citizenship laws.
EPA-EFE/AHMED JALLANZO
Liberian President George Weah believes the current citizenship regulations in the country are unnecessarily “racist” and restrictive.
Over 80% of South Africans rely on state facilities like Chris Hani Baragwanath, the third largest hospital in the world.
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South Africa’s Competition Commission has delayed the release of the final report of an inquiry into the private healthcare again.
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir at the Arab Summit in Saudi Arabia in April 2018.
EPA-EFE/Stringer
The uprising in Sudan has weakened the authority of President Omar al-Bashir and political Islam in the country.
Maria Ramos, pictured here at the 2009 World Economic Forum early in her tenure at ABSA.
Copyright World Economic Forum www.weforum.org / Eric Miller emiller@iafrica.com [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Several locally listed companies still have no female board members while most who do diversify their boards tend to appoint only one female director at a time.
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Efforts to end female genital mutilation are mostly designed by global and national agencies and risk ignoring change agents like the youth who are against the practice.
Lusala a local wild yam in Zambia that supplements diets has seen a considerable rise in demand.
Author Supplied
Lusala, a wild yam that many in Zambia rely on for consumption and trade, is gradually taking longer to find due to deforestation.
Corruption is rife in the awarding of contracts for infrastructure projects, such as roads, in Nigeria.
Flickr/noise64
There is a huge amount of secrecy around the budgeting process at every level of the Nigerian government.
Global evidence suggests that alcohol advertisements increase adolescents’ favourable attitudes towards drinking.
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Easy access to alcohol and exposure to alcohol advertisements affect social and health outcomes.
Personalised medicine aims to tailor treatment according to each person’s genetic makeup.
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Gene sequences can be manipulated to prevent certain diseases and improve public health.
Vertical farms.
Vertical farms have the potential to feed many on the African continent.
When the wheels of partnership turn smoothly, Africa can benefit enormously.
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It’s all too common for local scholars to be sidelined in what are supposed to be genuine research partnerships.
South Africa’s President Cyril Rampahosa, right, must get tough on his Zimbabwean counterpart Emmerson Mnangagwa.
GovernmentZA/Flickr
South Africa needs to make life as uncomfortable as possible for members of Zimbabwe’s government.
People living in run-down, inner city apartments, like these in Cairo, are at risk of heat-stress health problems.
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The number of people dying due to climate-led changes in the environment are increasing and the poorest populations remain the hardest hit.
Banking water ensures a steadier, reliable supply in future.
Shutterstock/Gilles Paire
Banking water minimises the impact of evaporation and means that water can also be recycled from various sources.
A hawker sells clocks on a roadside in Nigeria’s oil rich Bayelsa state.
EPA/Tife Owolabi
Most of the things Nigerians complained about in 2015 are still unresolved – unemployment, poverty and economic disempowerment.
Angelo Agrizzi, the former chief operating officer of private security firm, at a South African commission of inquiry into corruption.
Sunday Times/Alan Skuy
The state capture inquiry is a remarkable political as well as legal event.
The French National Assembly, one of the Western institutions Western academics believe African countries should aspire to.
EPA-EFE/Yoan Valat
The argument isn’t whether African democracies are better than those in the West. It’s simply that the idea of “real” and “not yet real” democracies expresses a colonial mentality, not reality.
South Africa’s Finance Minister Tito Mboweni (centre) arrives to deliver the mid-term budget statement to Parliament.
EPA-EFE/Nic Bothma
South Africa needs to urgently step up its efforts to drive economic growth by harnassing the power of the state, as well as the markets.
General assimilatory practices can leave pupils feeling isolated.
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There are several ways to deal with discrimination, from initiating national dialogues to training teachers to identify their own biases.
Laurent Gbagbo, former president of Côte d’Ivoire, at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
EPA-EFE/Peter DeJong/Pool
The recent acquittals should be seen as a vindication of the ICC as an independent and impartial judicial institution.
Education has a bearing on prospects for sustainable economic opportunities as it feeds the market.
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The gaps in African government are twofold: governance and education. It is important to focus on both areas to bring about overall improvements.
Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda at the trial against former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo at the ICC in The Hague.
EPA/Peter Dejong
Acquittal bolsters an increasingly urgent conversation about how international criminal law is failing in its promise to hold leaders accountable