Sanou Mbaye
Africa’s French Roadblock
DAKAR – In recent years, China and Africa have formed one of the modern era’s most successful economic and trade partnerships. China benefit…
Please note that articles not available in your chosen language are displayed in English. Articles available in your chosen language feature a flag in the top left corner of the accompanying image.
DAKAR – In recent years, China and Africa have formed one of the modern era’s most successful economic and trade partnerships. China benefit…
LAGOS – Nigerian security forces recently razed a northeastern fishing village, leaving almost 200 people dead and destroying some 2,000 hom…
WASHINGTON, DC – The European Union already faces considerable risks concerning its structure, uncertain economic recovery, north-south imba…
NEW YORK – The African National Congress, which has governed South Africa since the end of apartheid, is in serious trouble. Unfortunately, …
EXETER – Commenting on the recent Algerian hostage crisis on an international news channel, one terrorism “expert” made a remarkable claim: …
NAIROBI – As Kenya approaches its general election on March 4, memories of the bloodshed that marred the controversial 2007 presidential ele…
LAGOS – When I was a boy, growing up in Kano in northern Nigeria, my Koranic teacher was totally crippled from the waist down. A boy with wh…
JOHANNESBURG – Africký ekonomický potenciál – a obchodní příležitosti, jež s sebou přináší – se dnes už všeobecně uznává. Chudoba a nez…
LAGOS – Africa’s economies are finally beginning to roar. In 2000-2010, after decades of sluggish growth, six of the world’s ten fastest-gro…
PARIS – Africa is undergoing a period of unprecedented economic growth. According to The Economist, six of the ten fastest-growing countries…
Does foreign aid to Africa only make matters worse? Will AIDS wipe out a generation? Can Zimbabwe be saved from Robert Mugabe’s misrule? What can stop the genocide in Darfur? How will Africans feed and educate themselves? Does debt relief promote or ultimately hinder economic growth?
Africa’s challenges seem too numerous to count, and too overwhelming to overcome. The AIDS pandemic victimizes the sub-Sahara, even as high birth rates burden societies already unable to educate and employ their youth. Poverty remains a scourge, and ethnic wars seem emblematic of the continent’s incapacity for tolerance. Besieged by problems, Africa is often dismissed as a basket case and consigned to a future as a ward of the international community.
But Africa is also a source of hope and possibility. Rather than a monolith to be pitied, Africa is a study in contradictions: most sub-Saharan countries record little ethnic violence, despite a Babel of local languages and traditions. Multinational firms generally look elsewhere when doling out investment and jobs, yet Africa remains the world’s largest untapped market – and its greatest source of cheap labor.
Africa’s people struggle to hold together diverse communities more frequently than they tear them apart. To understand where the continent is headed, one must listen to African voices.
Project Syndicate’s monthly series Into Africa offers an unrivaled array of African thinkers, including Nobel laureates Wangari Maathai, Sole Woyinka, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and Nadine Gordimer, Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, Senegal’s President Abdoulaye Wade, Ghana’s President John Kufuor, Okwir Raboni, a Ugandan MP and a former child soldier, and Sanou Mbaye, a former economist with the Banque Africaine de Développement.
Show moreProject Syndicate produces video interviews with regular and featured authors, conducted by the editors of Project Syndicate. In these lively interviews, Project Syndicate contributors expand upon their ideas and analyses, and on the events and trends that their commentaries address. These pithy, compelling discussions are the perfect way to enhance the impact of commentaries that you receive from Project Syndicate.
Complimentary English-language podcasts are provided with the majority of our commentaries. Podcasts are a stimulating complement to Project Syndicate content, and an easy means of integrating a popular media platform into your offerings.
Project Syndicate works with NewsArt, a collective of artists who create graphics that wittily allude to the topics addressed in the commentaries that they accompany. These inventive representations of the controversies and events of the day provide eye-catching counterparts to the news that you report.
With each column that we distribute, we offer a selection of NewsArt graphics that are available for immediate purchase with a simple click of your mouse. You may then use those images alongside Project Syndicate commentaries, or as a means of enhancing your own content.