Bonus: Zimbabwe’s 2023 Elections

“Few were surprised as, near midnight on August 26, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission announced incumbent president Emmerson Mnangagwa’s reelection in yet another of Zimbabwe’s tendentious contests,” writes David B. Moore. “His inauguration on September 4 sanctified his return to power.” In this article by Moore, first published in The Conversation Africa, he explains how the Read More…

Student Essay Winner: The Nigeria 2023 Election

Our student essay competition winner is Wisdom Adediji, an undergraduate student at the University of Ibadan! Wisdom reads his essay, “The Nigeria 2023 Election, Aftermath, and Way Forward to National Development,” for this bonus episode.  “The Nigeria 2023 Election, Aftermath, and Way Forward to National Development” By Wisdom Adediji, undergraduate student at the University of Read More…

Bonus: Miriam J. Anderson reviews “War, Women, and Post-conflict Empowerment”

“War, Women, and Post-conflict Empowerment: Lessons from Sierra Leone depicts the everyday struggles of women trying to improve their lives, while illuminating the political, legal and economic conditions of Sierra Leoneans after civil war,” writes Miriam Anderson. This week’s episode is Anderson’s full review of the book, originally published in The Monkey Cage.  Review read by Read More…

Bonus: Carolyn E. Holmes reviews “The Inheritors” and “Until We Have Won Our Liberty”

Carolyn E. Holmes writes for The Monkey Cage about two books that take different roads to understand South Africa:The Inheritors: An Intimate Portrait of South Africa’s Racial Awakening by Eve Fairbanks and Until We Have Won Our Liberty: South Africa after Apartheid by Evan Lieberman.  “It is not that Fairbanks’s account of the New South Africa is pessimistic while Read More…

Bonus: Travis B. Curtice’s review of “Policing and Politics in Nigeria”

In this review from The Monkey Cage’s African Politics Summer Reading Spectacular, Travis B. Curtice tells us that Policing and Politics in Nigeria: A Comprehensive History “is a must read” for anyone trying to understand #ENDSARS, militarization, and the lingering effects of settler colonial dynamics on police. The book was reviewed by Curtice in July 2022. Review read Read More…

Bonus: Senegal’s Voters in the Driver’s Seat

“Despite a tense campaign period, low voter turnout (46%), and the opposition’s calls to secure the votes in certain localities, election day remained peaceful and highly competitive,” write Oumar Ba, Rachel Beatty Riedl, and Bamba Ndiaye.

Hear the full article from The Conversation: Africa on today’s bonus episode, read by Ami Tamakloe.