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Africa Renewal - Current Issue
Volume 33, Issue 1, 2019
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African women in politics: Miles to go before parity is achieved
Autor: Zipporah MusauIn the fight for gender equality, women around the world have advanced in small and large ways. Yet for women in Africa, progress is measured in micro steps, and the struggle has a long way to go.
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Economic empowerment of women good for all
Autor: Kingsley IghoborGovernment staffer Souhayata Haidara enjoys talking about her life in a patriarchal society. Her career is a triumph of patience and perseverance, she tells Africa Renewal with a smile and a wink.
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Youthful minister opening doors for women and girls
Autor: Baboki KayaweBogolo Kenewendo describes herself as having been “an ordinary Botswana child with an ordinary upbringing.” Ms. Kenewendo, poised and focused beyond her years, is being modest. At 32 she is Botswana’s youngest minister, in charge of investment, trade and industry.
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Good education is the foundation for effective female leadership
Autor: Franck KuwonuAfrican women’s restricted access to quality education, knowledge and resources is preventing them from gaining leadership positions on the continent, says Kafui Adjamagbo-Johnson, a veteran West African women’s rights activist. Another problem is that women—especially rural women—are allowed only limited control over finances, means of production and land.
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Technology is a liberating force for african women
Autor: Charles Onyango-ObboAs ride-hailing apps proliferate the globe, the year-old An Nisa Taxi in Kenya is one of the standouts in Africa.
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Preparing africa’s graduates for today’s
Autor: Raphael ObonyoMany Africans with advanced qualifications are finding their university degrees are just not enough to land a job in the current market.
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Young people can capably lead africa into the future - Interview: Aya Chebbi, African Union Youth Envoy
Autor: Aya ChebbiAya Chebbi of Tunisia is the first-ever youth envoy of the African Union. Her appointment in November 2018 boosts the AU’s efforts to include the talents and skills of the continent’s bulging youth population in achieving its Agenda 2063, a framework for Africa’s socioeconomic transformation. Ms. Chebbi is expected to promote, among other issues, youth leadership and participation in governance, gender equality, safe migration, employment and climate change action. Raphael Obonyo, a youth activist, interviewed Ms. Chebbi for Africa Renewal on a range of issues affecting Africa’s young people. These are excerpts.
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African music on a round trip—from cotonou to cuba and back
Autor: Franck KuwonuIt’s Sunday night at Aba House, an open-air bar in Lomé, Togo’s capital, and stylish young men and women in modern African dress fill the dance floor as the bass guitarist pumps up the tempo. Powerful! Soulful!
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Countries propose a treaty to end corporate impunity
Autor: Hans WetzelsWhen Ecuadorian diplomat Luis Gallegos first proposed a “Binding Treaty on Business and Human Rights,” many countries and environmental activists welcomed the idea with open arms.
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No real development in africa without regional integration - Interview: Ahunna Eziakonwa
Autor: Ahunna EziakonwaUnited Nations Assistant Secretary-General Ahunna Eziakonwa is the new Director of the Regional Bureau for Africa of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Ms. Eziakonwa had served as the UN Resident Coordinator in Ethiopia, Uganda and Lesotho. In this interview with Africa Renewal’s Kingsley Ighobor, she discusses key issues pertaining to Africa’s socioeconomic development, including the empowerment of women and youth and Africa’s free trade area, which entered into force in April. These are excerpts.
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Africa’s megacities a magnet for investors
Autor: Finbarr ToeslandMegacities, cities with a population of at least 10 million, are sprouting everywhere in Africa. Cairo in Egypt, Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Lagos in Nigeria are already megacities, while Luanda in Angola, Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and Johannesburg in South Africa will attain the status by 2030, according the United Nations.
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Mechanizing agricultureis key to food security
Autor: Busani BafanaAn African woman with hoe in hand is the default symbol of agriculture in Africa, according to the late Calestous Juma, African academic and former Harvard Kennedy School professor. Mr. Juma used that image to convey the drudgery-filled farming that women on the continent face.
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Zimbabwe’s beef industry stampedes back to life
Autor: Ray MwareyaZimbabwe’s famed beef industry, which collapsed in the 2000s following outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease, is now rebounding.
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Paying a high price for skin bleaching
Autor: Pavithra Rao“I’ve been dark skinned for many years and I wanted to experience the other side. I wanted to see what it would be like to be white and I’m happy,” says South African singer Mshoza, whose real name is Nomasonto Mnisi.
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