An African Climate Finance Agenda for COP26
The climate finance landscape is both wide and deep and is driven by a number of inter-related and complex considerations.
The climate finance landscape is both wide and deep and is driven by a number of inter-related and complex considerations.
After years of de-industrialisation and limited intra-regional trade, which have been serious constraints to inclusive growth and development, African countries have an opportunity to leverage the potential of the African Continental Free Trade Area to accelerate their industrialisation efforts and greatly improve their economic well-being.
South Africa (SA), like the rest of the democratic world, faces the dilemma of having to conduct an election during a global pandemic.
The Zimbabwean Government under President Emmerson Mnangagwa acceded to the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) in February of 2020.
This report was compiled by civil society organisations and individual contributors in Zimbabwe during the course of 2020 and 2021, guided by SAIIA and the SIVIO Institute in Harare.
The spread of COVID-19 in 2020 and 2021 has caused high mortality and morbidity rates across
the globe.
During the period between 1961, when Tanzania attained independence, and the mid-1980s, the country followed socialist macroeconomic policies.
The year 2020 marked two decades since the start of the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation (FOCAC).
African countries want to become major competitors in the global economy.
The quality and availability of transport and other critical infrastructure has been a major
barrier to the development of world-class mineral deposits in Africa.