
To help keep our community authentic, we're showing information about accounts on Linktree.
Chatham House Africa Programme has been a member of Linktree for 4 years and joined in March 2022. The social media accounts linked to from Chatham House Africa Programme are: Facebook, LinkedIn, Email, X, Bluesky, Website. Besides social media accounts, CHAfrica has populated their site with Ethiopia needs more than an election to calm internal and regional conflict, Elite capture of Africa’s critical minerals mustn’t be mistaken for resource sovereignty, The flow of arms and money feeding the war in Sudan can be cut. What is missing is the will, Mali attacks show security cannot be delivered by military means alone, Local aid groups are keeping Sudan alive, The AU summit is an opportunity for decisive action to end the war in Sudan, The AU can help African countries adopt the UN cybercrime convention. But the challenges are significant, Agenda | Digitalization in Africa: Adapting to a changing global landscape, Sudan: the internal and external forces tearing it apart, Why ending the war in Sudan should be a higher priority for the West, Gold and the war in Sudan, Kenya’s conversion of Chinese debt to renminbi reflects economic pragmatism more than strained US ties, The AU can help African countries adopt the UN cybercrime convention. But the challenges are significant., The good, the bad, and the possible: What the America First Global Health Strategy means for Africa – and the world | Chatham House – International Affairs Think Tank, South Africa’s G20 presidency is a chance for the West to engage with Global South priorities, The credibility of US backing for a DRC–Rwanda peace deal rests on the risk appetite of corporate America | Chatham House – International Affairs Think Tank, Nigeria’s economy needs the naira to stay competitive | Chatham House – International Affairs Think Tank, Can Africa’s economic recovery withstand inevitable shocks?, What the African Union’s G20 membership means for Africa, Envisioning a more peaceful and secure Africa, Taking action against corruption in Nigeria, Gold and the war in Sudan, The ‘conflict economy’ of sesame in Ethiopia and Sudan, Towards just transition: Achieving fairer outcomes in African forest governance, carbon markets and just energy transitions, Africa after USAID: who will pay the health bill?, Africa must strengthen continental unity to boost its global influence, Reviving Tanzania’s regional leadership and global engagement, De-escalation is needed to prevent Ethiopia and Eritrea from going to war, [FR] Agenda - L’influence croissante de l’Afrique, [EN] Agenda - Africa’s rising influence, Africa Aware: Strengthening African-led peace and security initiatives, Tanzania’s election violence: Deflecting blame will only do more harm, Strengthening Africa’s health security, Sierra Leone's return to the UN Security Council, South Sudan’s shaky peace is at risk of collapse. Can it be saved?, Gold and the war in Sudan, Why peacebuilding fails and what to do about it, The credibility of US backing for a DRC–Rwanda peace deal rests on the risk appetite of corporate America, Navigating a path beyond regional division is essential for West Africa’s security, South Africa can mitigate Trump’s ire through economic diplomacy and non-alignment.