Through their exposure to new trends in knowledge production, African academics in the diaspora can contribute to equipping African students for the global economy.
Iraqi, Iranian and Somali asylum seekers at a tent camp in the Netherlands.
ROBIN UTRECHT/AFP/GettyImages
Ian Goldin, University of Oxford and Robert Muggah, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)
The consequences will be far more severe and long lasting in poorer countries.
A National Youth Service Corps member leaves the orientation camp in Kubwa, Abuja, following an order by the Nigerian government to curb the spread of the COVID-19.
Kola Sulaimon/AFP via Getty Images
The notion that there is a binary choice between the economy and the medically optimal strategy is wrong.
Ethiopian Minister of Water, Irrigation and Energy Seleshi Bekele (C) attends a meeting with his Egyptian and Sudanese counterparts, in Khartoum, Sudan, 21 December 2019.
EPA-EFE/MARWAN ALI
The Nile Treaties prevent upstream countries from using the waters of the Nile without the consent of those downstream. This results in an Egyptian bias.
Frequently used phrases to frame discussion about Chinese capital in Africa don’t allow for the interrogation of the actual behaviour, practices and possibilities of Chinese capital.
A woman flashes the V for victory sign as Sudanese protesters demonstrate in Khartoum on July 25, 2019.
Ashraf Shazly/AFP via Getty Images
Remaining nonviolent despite enormous provocation made it difficult for the regime to depict the movement in a negative light
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa declaring a national lockdown as a result of COVID-19.
EPA/picture supplied by GCIS (Government Information Services)
Epidemiology is only one of the inputs that should be considered in designing public health policy response to COVID-19 pandemic. The wider social and economic contexts must be factored in too.
HIV activists in Khayelitsha, Cape Town, South Africa in 2004. Solidarity and organisation were key in fighting HIV stigma.
Gideon Mendel/Corbis via Getty Images
Recently, the Kano State government in the north west region of Nigeria removed the Emir, the first highly westernised and educated person on the throne.
A deserted street in Cairo after the government ordered the closure of shops, restaurants and cafes.
Photo by Ziad Ahmed/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Social distancing is impossible in much of Africa, and its economic consequences may lead to a famine that is worse than the pandemic. Prevention measures must consider the African context.
Many informal workers will not be able to take the precautions that health authorities suggest.
South Africa’s Alexandra township in the foreground, where the majority live in squalor, and Sandton in the background, representing the most privileged
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Most consumers in South Africa aren’t able to fill up a trolley of groceries for their daily needs, let alone join the panic buying induced by the COVID-19 pandemic.
South Sudan President Salva Kiir
Siphiwe Sibeko/EPA-EFE