Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe died in 2019.
EFE-EPA/Yeshiel Panchia
Moore did not unearth any treasures in his research of Mugabe’s legacy. He has not even drawn a map that might lead us to them.
Greywater is used all over the world for domestic and agricultural irrigation.
Shuang Li/Shutterstock
Researchers have long argued that greywater could bolster South Africa’s food security if it’s used to water domestic food gardens.
Queen Elizabeth II waves from the balcony of Buckingham Palace during the Platinum Jubilee Pageant.
Chris Jackson/Getty Images
The decolonisation process was to take place rapidly during the reign of Elizabeth II.
A farm worker picks medical cannabis flowers in Kasese, Uganda, in 2020.
Photo by Luke Dray/Getty Images
Ensuring the participation of ordinary citizens and producers in the industry is the big challenge facing African states.
The author and a colleague on the hunt for fossil traces.
Morena Nava
Collectively, the evidence studied by ichnologists helps to paint a picture of long-gone landscapes and the creatures and plants that populated those spaces.
South Sudanese children play at a refugee camp in northern Uganda.
Geovien So/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Refugee law puts humanitarianism above considerations of state sovereignty.
Refugees and asylum seekers were forced to live in the open in Cape Town following xenophobic attacks in 2019.
Brenton Geach/via Getty Images
Despite regular incidents of anti-migrant violence, peaceful and mutually beneficial relationships between South Africans and migrants can and do exist.
A Zimbabwean broom vender pushes his bike on the streets of Chitungwiza outside Harare.
ALEXANDER JOE/AFP via Getty Images
The informal sector in Zimbabwe is massive. Finding ways to connect it to the formal sector is vital.
The farmers’ predicament can’t be viewed in isolation and must be understood within the context of global processes beyond their control.
Christopher Scott via Getty Images
The state controls and regulates small farmers’ environmental practices without addressing what forces them to follow these practices.
Photo by Visual Narphilia courtesy Synik
Synik’s new album continues to shape identity and consciousness in a country with limited freedom of speech.
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Saponins from plants can destroy viruses and other microorganisms in the same way commercial soaps and detergents do.
In Lesotho, solar panels generate power for households.
Max Pixel
Sub-Saharan Africa is one of the world’s most sunlit regions. A prototype generator uses that sunlight in place of diesel to support unreliable electricity grids.
Even if additional energy production capacity was added to the national grid through renewables, questions remain about whether access will be equitable and affordable.
Lou Bopp/ GettyImages
Continuous growth of energy production and consumption, even from low carbon energy sources, could create more problems than solutions.
Blood feeding female malaria vector Anopheles arabiensis.
University of Pretoria Institute for Sustainable Malaria Control
The countries share related populations, economies, ecologies and epidemiologies. This interconnectedness highlights challenges and opportunities for more effective malaria control across the region.
Public transport drivers haggling over currency exchange in Harare, Zimbabwe.
Jekesai Nikizana/AFP via Getty Images
To kick-start ethical regeneration of Zimbabwean society political leaders need to take the lead in the fight against corrupt and speculative activities.
A group of African woman walking on their way home in Zimbabwe. The informal sector has potential to harness small sustainability benefits.
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Informal economic activities in Norton, Zimbabwe play a part in environmental sustainability and contribute to the town’s financial sustainability.
Zimbabwe holds important lessons for the COP26 global climate change talks.
Tafadzwa Ufumeli via GettyImages
The focus of climate talks has been on how little time is left is for global action. But climate change has already made tobacco farming, potentially a route out of poverty, unviable for some.
Women continue to fetch wood and cook over smoky fires even where there are solar home systems.
GettyImages
Developments in the energy sector shouldn’t be reduced to technological sophistication. They should be guided by how they improve the livelihoods of the intended beneficiaries.
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Zimbabwe’s 2021 bumper harvest is a welcome development but, it’s important to know what’s behind this success and what challenges remain.
A politician argued that the Rhodesian ridgeback was the dog of the ancestors and proposed renaming it the Zimbabwe ridgeback.
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How Harare has dealt with its urban canine citizens over the years following independence reflects the competing visions of a modern city.