Kenya

Cover of Debi Goodwin's book Citizens of Nowhere

Book Review: Citizens of Nowhere by Debi Goodwin

The eleven extraordinary young people profiled in Citizens of Nowhere have been teachers, social workers, mediators, and breadwinners. Journalist Debi Goodwin meets them as refugees in Dadaab, Kenya, and follows them through their difficult transition to life as first-year university students in Canada. They have each been sponsored to come to study in Canada as… More »

A sunset in Elongatuas, Masai Mara, Kenya (2009). Photo by Siena Anstis.

Tips for young journalists who want to work in international development

[Editor's Note: Siena Anstis, who has served as our Africa correspondent on the blog over the past few months, is moving on to new projects. She'll continue to contribute to the blog, but wanted to pass on some of the things she's learned during her time working and reporting in Uganda, Kenya, and elsewhere for... More »

Poster for Pamoja's new dance work, Koncrete City.

Nairobi's Pamoja dancers defy disability with new "Koncrete City" performance

There’s a scene in the Kenyan dance company Pamoja‘s new ballet, Konkrete City, where all I could feel was the hectic beat of downtown Nairobi, or Vancouver, or Toronto. The dancers—most of them handicapped—depicted the Central Business District, Kenya’s core of business towers and banks, during the rainy season. Walking, running and jumping; swinging arms,… More »

Issue #1 of Kwani?, the journal of contemporary African literature.

Kwani? magazine shifts Kenya's national political conversation

Several of my previous blog posts have mentioned Kwani?, the Nairobi literary journal/publishing network dedicated to building contemporary African literature. My interest in the publication was first aroused by the contrasting literary scenes in Uganda and Kenya. While FEMRITE, based in Kampala, Uganda, is a strong local writers’ organization, I never found a literary magazine… More »

Google Map's incomplete data for Kibera, the world's largest slum. An open source mapping project aims to provide a clearer picture.

An open source project to map one of the world's biggest slums

Kibera, one of the world’s biggest slums, is a “glaring omission” on Google Maps, says Erica Hagen, member of the Map Kibera team. Indeed, Kibera remains a blank spot in relatively well-mapped and densely populated Nairobi, the economic hub of East Africa. When I first heard of this project, my first thought was of the… More »

Participants in the "Africa Gathering" conference in London, October 27, 2009. CC-licensed photo via Flickr by chiefmoamba.

The African diaspora, not Western aid, is the key to true development

In the interest of full disclosure, I currently work with Project Diaspora and am getting hitched to one of the founders next year in Uganda (you might be invited). However, that said, I think myself (mostly) capable of distinguishing between these personal associations and PD’s mandate. When I first joined PD in 2008, I was… More »

The Greenhouse Preschool in the Kibera slum, Nairobi, Kenya. The school aims to improve the quality of life for disabled children in the neighbourhood. Photo courtesy Deaf Aid

Unique deaf school in Nairobi slum is a sign of hope for disabled Kenyans

Patrick teaches at the Greenhouse Pre-School in Kibera. Tucked into a sunny courtyard, the school is not typically representative of Kibera, the largest slum in the world and often used to represent Kenya’s “darker” side. The 25 students Patrick teaches are deaf. While they might be silenced to the busy noise of the surrounding city,… More »

Delegates at the Unesco Youth Forum in Paris are articulating a completely new worldview. Photo by Siena Anstis.

A world-changing consensus emerging at the UNESCO Youth Forum in Paris

Over the past four years I have had the great fortune of being able to live and travel in different places around the world. As I made it my job to spend time talking with youth from these different countries—primarily Uganda, Kenya, Canada, Denmark and Kosovo—I quickly discovered that we have one common and highly… More »

"What is the What" by Dave Eggers and Achak Deng

Book Review: Achak Deng and Dave Eggers' What is the What

When civil war between representatives of south Sudan and the government — or north Sudan — erupted in the early 80s, the debris took the form of mass displacement, thousands upon thousands of southern Sudanese leaving their villages that had been ravaged by government-financed militia. Among the unhappy travellers were newly orphaned young males, the… More »

Outgoing Kenyan police commissioner Hussein Ali shakes hands with his successor, Mathew Iteere. Photo courtesy Daily Nation.

New reforms aim to protect Kenyans—from their own police force

One evening in December, during the post-election violence in Kisumu, Western Kenya, Dennis Otieno was walking down Tom Mboya Street with four other friends. Once a busy thoroughfare, he was now walking past empty stores with their windows smashed in and their goods looted. Suddenly, a police car pulled up and two policemen spilled out… More »