Social Insight
Suella Braverman Wants Former Colonies to Repay Britain. Repay It for What, Exactly? 

Suella Braverman Wants Former Colonies to Repay Britain. Repay It for What, Exactly? 

Suella Braverman's remark that former colonies should repay Britain reopens an old question: was the empire remembered as investment or extraction? From railways built to move resources to the wealth behind Europe's industrial rise, the debate over colonialism, identity, and reparations refuses to fade. 

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article source iconPRECIOUS O. UNUSERE
Social Insight
If Every Crisis Is Breaking News, Why Does Nothing Feel Broken Anymore? 

If Every Crisis Is Breaking News, Why Does Nothing Feel Broken Anymore? 

Breaking news no longer breaks through. Audiences have grown numb to headlines amid misinformation, shrinking attention spans, survival instincts, and broken government promises, raising urgent questions about what journalism must become to matter again.
Precious O. Unusere
With All the Reforms Going On in Nigeria, Will the Country Ever Get Better?

With All the Reforms Going On in Nigeria, Will the Country Ever Get Better?

Nigeria has seen reform after reform for decades—but why do so many citizens still struggle?  Is this time finally different, because if these reforms are fully implemented, will they truly make the country better? 
Ogochukwu Magdalene Obia
Are Cheap Loans Giving the World Bank and IMF Too Much Power in Africa?

Are Cheap Loans Giving the World Bank and IMF Too Much Power in Africa?

Cheap loans can help build economies—but what happens when they come with tough policy conditions? Kenya's latest World Bank deal is reigniting the debate over Africa's financial independence. 
Ogochukwu Magdalene Obia
Celebrity Political Neutrality: Do Public Figures Owe the Public Their Voice?

Celebrity Political Neutrality: Do Public Figures Owe the Public Their Voice?

Should celebrities stay politically neutral? Read the debate over celebrity activism, public responsibility, political endorsements, and whether public figures owe society their voice.
Zainab Bakare