By Kwame Karikari Prof. Olatunji Dare came back home in 1977. I returned to Ghana in 1979. At the time and through the 1980s, our continent was ruled by military regimes and one-party states... Read more
By Doyin Odebowale Everyone and everything subject to time is finite. Monuments, ill-advisedly locked in mortal combat with time, will be reduced to rubbles. Empires and kingdoms become hist... Read more
By Kayode Ketefe Everything that has a beginning must have an end, so the 2014 National Conference which started on March 17, 2014, officially ends today with all the committees winding up t... Read more
By Gbenga Olorunpomi The dark days of military oppression are back! The Black Era has returned! Soldiers took over a major street in Lagos for five hours and we were helpless to stop them. T... Read more
By Adagbo Onoja The Nobel Prize might not make anyone the Asiwaju of African literature but that doesn’t mean we should mistake what the Nobel Prize stands for: the value of self-correction... Read more
By Margaret Looney While journalism professors who want to update their courses face slow approval processes in academia, the field is rapidly evolving, prompting many to wonder what a journ... Read more
By Michele McLellan Online local news startups are devoting significantly more resources to creating content than they are to raising money to pay for it — and that may spell trouble f... Read more
The New Yorker tries out a new distribution method, information security for journalists, Gannett’s content management system and more are found in this week’s Digital Media Mash... Read more
By Jaye Gaskia Bamidele Francis Aturu (Comrade BF) as we knew him is no longer with us, but his deeds continue to live on and inspire those of us that he has left behind. He was a Consummate... Read more
By Denja Yaqub The first time we met was sometime in 1988 soon after his youth service under the National Youth Service Corps’ compulsory programme for young graduates, which prepares... Read more