In The News

December 3, 2003
Agencies trying to curb the AIDS crisis in Africa need to expand their approach, argues Human Rights Watch. There is a crucial link between gender inequality and the spread of AIDS. Sexual assault, the use of rape as a mechanism of war, the cultural acceptance of domestic violence, and women's lack of voice have kept women at the mercy of the disease in Africa. On that continent, women are...
Michael Weainstein November 9, 2003
Western leaders have long claimed that poor countries can lift their citizens out of poverty simply by shifting to competitive markets. Yet in sub-Saharan Africa, countries that have opened up to competition remain hopelessly mired in poverty. And this lack pf progress cannot always be blamed on corrupt domestic institutions or civil strife. Take Ghana – a relatively corruption-free, stable...
Norbert Mao November 3, 2003
In the race to attract global capital and spur economic growth, Africa seems to have missed the bandwagon. Norbert Mao, a member of the Ugandan Parliament and currently a Yale World Fellow, says that Africa's dismal economic situation is a result of both inept political leadership and unfair policies of the developed world. Agricultural subsidies, patent restrictions, and a host of trade...
Marc Lacey October 7, 2003
People across the world's poorest continent are gambling their limited incomes on scratch-off cards and lotto tickets. As countries ease betting restrictions to encourage economic growth, foreign companies have begun investing in Africa's new blossoming industry. "The African market is a relatively small part of the world market," one British investor noted, "but it...
Goko September 26, 2003
With an Islamic appeals court's acquittal of Amina Lawal, the Nigerian woman who was sentenced to death for having sex out of wedlock, feminist activists from around the world are celebrating a victory against conservative Shari 'a law. However, as the editorial in this Johannesburg daily points out , violations of women's rights are common in many parts of Africa – Muslim,...
Marc Lacey September 10, 2003
Ugandan cotton farmers are a prime example of developing world farmers who are losing the competition with their subsidized counterparts in Europe and the United States; simply making ends meet is difficult. At the new meeting of the Doha trade talks in Cancun this week, African countries are demanding either an end to the American and European policy of subsidizing farmers – a policy which...
Marc Lacey September 4, 2003
“Big Brother”, the reality television show that gained success in the Western world, has found a new audience in Africa. The African version has become the most popular show on the continent, with 30 million Africans tuning in to watch 12 young professionals from a diverse group of countries live together as housemates, sharing disagreements and romantic entanglements. While some religious and...