- I have been traveling though West Africa. I have not seen a lot but I have seen enough to make some early judgments. You cannot take...
There has been much talk on Africa’s renaissance especially by the World Bank and the African Development Bank. This...
The say you do not choose who your neighbors are, there is no doubt however that Somalia is as a bad as a neighbor can get. As a...- Is Africa truly rising? It depends on where you are looking at it from. If you look at it from where we used to be then you’d...





When President Barack Obama steps foot in Ghana on the 10th of July 2009, he will be walking into one of the very few global contexts where George Bush will be a hard act to follow: “development aid to Africa”.
Mr. Cofie's excellent
From Highlife to Hiplife, Ghana’s sounds fill dance floors all over the continent. Unfortunately, it takes more to build a music industry than talent and (unenforced) law. Enforcement of the law and a music business with effective private institutions, such as music publishers and industry associations, are required.
Follow the intrigues of salary negotiations between Ghana’s governments and the medical fraternity. In Ghana and most African countries “health workers do not have any document that spells out the terms and conditions of their service” We at AfricanLiberty.org and IMANI have long argued, that access to health care cannot be a sanctioned human right when the basic infrastructures and reasonably well-paid doctors and nurses are non-existent. Add absence of good drinking water and good food and the real poverty profiling of diseases stare activists for free access to healthcare and health products in the face.









