Causes

Africa’s Odious Debts

8 Articles

These debts are considered “odious” because they violate principles of fairness and accountability: the money  borrowed is without the consent of the people, used for illegitimate purposes, and yet current and future generations are expected to repay it.

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Education Sovereignty

0 Articles

Championing the right of African nations to design, control, and lead their own education systems—rooted in local cultures, languages, histories, and aspirations. This involves rejecting one-size-fits-all models imposed by external actors and reclaiming the power to define what meaningful, transformative education looks like for African societies.

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Food Sovereignty

0 Articles

Empowering communities, farmers, and local stakeholders to define and control their own food systems in ways that align with their cultural values, ecological conditions, and economic needs. By advocating for locally-driven agricultural practices, we support small-scale farmers, protect indigenous seeds and farming knowledge, and promote sustainable methods of food production.

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Health Sovereignty

3 Articles

Pushing for Africa’s full autonomy and control over health systems, policies, and resources. Ensuring that African nations can independently design, fund, and implement healthcare solutions tailored to the needs of their populations—free from overdependence on foreign aid, pharmaceutical imports, or external policy agendas.

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Natural Resources

1 Articles

Calling for African nations and communities to have full control, ownership, and benefit from the vast natural wealth of the continent. This involves challenging exploitative systems—both foreign and local—that extract resources without fair returns, while promoting sustainable and equitable management of land, minerals, forests, and water.

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Reassessing the "Climate Crisis'

1 Articles

Pushing for a deeper, more critical evaluation of how we understand, respond to, and frame the global climate emergency. It calls for moving beyond surface-level or short-term fixes and instead challenging the underlying systems—economic, political, and social—that drive environmental degradation.

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