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The Enduring Malformation of West Africa Why Economics Alone Cannot Explain West Africa’s Slow Development

Abel B. S. Gaiya·February 9, 2023
Beyond leveraging the global push for repatriation and calling for the return of stolen cultural artefacts, the Nigerian government needs to change its attitude towards cultural art to guarantee the Benin Bronzes a meaningful future at home. Read More...
Best of 2023: EssaysFebruary/March 2023Nigeriavol7-no1

How Do We Determine Who Wins the Elections?

The Republic·February 9, 2023
How do we cast our votes on election day? Read More...
Elections 101February/March 2023NigeriaNigeria Decides 2023

Strings Attached Africa and the Politics of International Food Aid

Ayoola Oladipupo·February 8, 2023
The Ukrainian government has donated 25,000 tonnes of wheat to Nigeria, simultaneously announcing plans to develop grain hubs for constant supply of grain and food products. Read More...
February/March 2023Nigeria
Artefacts

The Bronze Elephant in the Room After the Benin Bronzes Come Home, What Next?

Daniel Olaoluwa Whyte·February 7, 2023
Beyond leveraging the global push for repatriation and calling for the return of stolen cultural artefacts, the Nigerian government needs to change its attitude towards cultural art to guarantee the Benin Bronzes a meaningful future at home. Read More...
Best of 2023: EssaysFebruary/March 2023Nigeriavol7-no1

Nigeria’s Mental Health Sector Has a New Messiah Behind the 2021 Mental Health Act

Boluwatito Sanusi·February 6, 2023
According to the World Health Organization, one in four Nigerians—about 50 million individuals suffer from a mental health condition. Read More...
February/March 2023Nigeria
Nuzzle of a fuel pump

No Fuel to Campaign Between Seyi Makinde’s Campaign Suspension and Nigeria's Fuel Shortage

Hillary Essien·February 5, 2023
Seyi Makinde’s campaign suspension in Oyo paints a grim picture of Nigeria’s fuel scarcity and the elections just weeks away.  Read More...
February/March 2023NewsNigeria
Wole Talabi

‘The Mechanics of Storytelling at Any Length Aren’t Different’ Wole Talabi's First Draft

Wole Talabi·February 3, 2023
Nigerian author, Wole Talabi, believes the mechanics of storytelling at any length aren’t different. Read More...
February/March 2023First DraftInterviewsNigeria

How Do We Vote?

The Republic·February 2, 2023
How do we cast our votes on election day? Read More...
Elections 101February/March 2023NigeriaNigeria Decides 2023
Peter Obi at Chatham House

Obi Labours at Chatham House Analyzing Peter Obi’s Chatham House Speech

Chukwudi Ukonne·February 1, 2023
The presidential flag bearer of the Labour Party bolstered his already stellar reputation with an electric outing at Chatham House, but did he tell us anything about himself and his policies we did not already know?  Read More...
February/March 2023NigeriaNigeria Decides 2023Nigeria Decides 2023: Essays

V7, N1 Godfathers: An Introduction

The Republic·February 1, 2023
Godfathers: An Introduction - Look Inside Read More...
Dispatchvol7-no1

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CURRENT ISSUE

Current-Issue

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The essential guide to the ideas, trends, people and stories shaping Nigeria and the broader African continent. Subscribe from N5,000/$5.99 monthly.

Today in 1963, Jomo Kenyatta was elected the first Today in 1963, Jomo Kenyatta was elected the first prime minister of Kenya. #RPUBLCHistory ⌛⁠
⁠
On 27 May 1963, the people of Kenya voted for the first time in history for their own government. Jomo Kenyatta became the country’s first prime minister after his party, Kenya African Nation Union, won the country’s first general election.⁠
⁠
Read more about Kenyatta by clicking the image in the link in bio. ⁠
⁠
-----------------------⁠
📝: Tomisin Awosika
📷: 1) UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim Meets with President Jomo Kenyatta, State House Mombasa, 1972. Saw Lin/UN Photo. 
2) Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya and Hastings Banda of Malawi. Wikimedia Commons.
3) Jomo Kenyatta, 22 August 1978. Wikimedia Commons.
Our Global issue is The Republic’s boldest magaz Our Global issue is The Republic’s boldest magazine yet.

As the world tilts toward a new era of multipolarity, Africa refuses the margins. This issue places the continent where it belongs: in the heart of the global conversation.

From essays touching on US-Africa relations to original fiction edited by Chigozie Obioma (@chigozieobiomaauthor), this edition is a complete immersion into the politics, possibilities and stories shaping African futures.

Order your copy now by clicking the link in bio or our IG story.

Welcome to the #RPUBLCWorldOrder🔥
Building a Pro-Regional Coalition in Nigeria #OnSi Building a Pro-Regional Coalition in Nigeria #OnSite⚡

On paper, Nigeria appears to be more capable of leading deeper regional integration, considering its economic and military heft. However, it struggles to build the pro-regional ideological coalition needed to transform ECOWAS from a dormant institution into a true engine of West African development. Without a unifying vision and a new generation of regionally conscious leaders, West Africa’s historic malformation will persist. 

This essay proposes that in addition to tangible resources, the region’s malformation demands a new intellectual movement, a bilingual elite and a strategic recalibration of Nigeria’s regional ambition that does not leave smaller states to fill the leadership void.

Will Nigeria advance beyond ‘giant of Africa’ rhetoric and actively construct the institutional, cultural and ideological foundations essential for regional leadership?

ECOWAS@50: It’s ECOWAS week and we are celebrating with a series of special edition essays—exclusively available for our digital subscribers. 

Take the poll below and share your opinion in the comments.

Read the full essay by clicking this image in the link in bio or our IG story.

___________

📝: Abel B.S. Gaiya (@abelgaiya1)
📸: Photo illustration by Dami Mojid (@dami_mojid) / THE REPUBLIC. Source Ref: AfDB / FLICKR.
🔍: Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo), Chidinma Nebolisa (@nmanebolisa_), Wale Lawal (@wallelawal); Editors.
Today in 1948, the National Party came into power Today in 1948, the National Party came into power in South Africa. #RPUBLCHistory⌛⁠
⁠
The National Party was a political party in South Africa. It was founded in 1914 to advance the interests of one group of people, the Afrikaners. It ruled from 1924 to 1934 and from 1948 to 1994. It was disbanded in 2005.⁠
⁠
Read more about Apartheid by clicking the image in the link in bio. ⁠
⁠
____________⁠
📝: Ibukun Olokode and Ugonna Eronini⁠
📷: 1)Signs enforcing racial segregation at post offices and railway stations were common in South Africa during apartheid. Photo: ILO⁠
2)D. F. Malan (centre) Prime Minister from 1948-1954 with his first cabinet, 1948. Wikimedia Commons. ⁠
3) South African police at Alexandra Township, January 1985. UN Photo/Flickr.
From a coming-of-age story which uses Igbo mytholo From a coming-of-age story which uses Igbo mythology to explain the realities of a fractured self to a debut told by a restless spirit, these books will expose you to the inner workings of the Nigerian spirit world. 📚
⁠
Have you read any of these? What book(s) would you recommend? Tell us in the comments!
⁠
Read the full list by clicking this reel at the link in our bio or IG story.⁠ ⁠
___________________________⁠

📝: Ìjàpá O (@ijapa_o), Junior Editor⁠
🔎: Peace Yetunde Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks)⁠, Associate Editor

#ReadSomethingAfrican⁠
Today in 1963, the Organization of African Unity ( Today in 1963, the Organization of African Unity (OAU) was formed. #RPUBLCHistory⌛.⁠
⁠
It was a bold dream: a united, decolonized, forward-facing Africa.⁠
But 60-plus years later, has the OAU — which became the African Union (AU) in 2002 — achieved its goals?⁠
⁠
The OAU was born in the glow of colonial independence, but its policy of non-interference made it toothless. Civil wars raged, coups flourished, the Cold War did its thing, and dictators dictated.⁠
⁠
Yes, reforms came with the AU's formation in 2002, and even more followed in 2016. @findthesignalpod writes, however, that the AU is haunted by institutional inefficiency, fragmented national agendas, and a dependence on foreign donors.⁠
⁠
And Pan-Africanism? It's on the letterhead. The AU, @findthesignalpod warns, risks becoming a talking shop unless it makes real structural changes, fast!⁠
⁠
Read more by clicking the image in the link in bio. ⁠
⁠
_____________⁠
🎨: Dami Mojid (@Dami_mojid) / THE REPUBLIC.⁠
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