Interviews with women that were raped during the genocide in Rwanda and often got children as a consequence. The videos mostly show pictures of the women and their children. You rarely hear the original interview, but rather a voice that reproduces a translation of it. [editors ilissAfrica]
According to their own statement, "[t]he Council on Foreign Relations is an independent, nonpartisan membership organization, think tank, and publisher dedicated to being a resource for its members, government officials, business executives, journalists, educators and students, civic and religious leaders, and other interested citizens in order to help them better understand the world and the foreign policy choices facing the United States and other countries." The website offers a lot of fulltexts (a lot for free, some, like e-books, are subject to a fee), like reports, analyses and others. [according to site editor’s information] ... [supplemented]
The Maison des Sciences de l'Homme in Paris presents several videos with interviews with the French researcher Marc-Henri Piault (CNRS, EHESS), a specialist of West Africa. The interviews focus on sociologie, political sciences, arts, urbanity and architecture. Also see table of contents. [editors ilissAfrica]
Africa News of the radio station "Radio Netherlands Worldwide" . Besides news articles you will also find to specific radio programmes: "Bridges with Africa" und "Africa in Progress". [editors ilissAfrica]
Homepage of the Kansas African Studies Center. You will find information about the studies' programme. Furthermore, you will find videos, audios and some texts for Hausa and Swahili (under "language", partly created by the students themselves), some papers from conferences and some online articles under "Publications > Occasional Papers". ... [editors ilissAfrica]
The project "African Women in Cinema" by researcher Beti Ellerson analysed African women directors as well as actors. The project has now turned into a real research centre with a lot of articles, video samples and other things. [editors ilissAfrica]
Sports in Africa (SinA) is a partnership of programs and departments at Ohio University, each sharing an interest and commitment to the development and improvement of Sports in Africa. The principal focus of SinA is the use of sports as a vehicle for social, cultural, educational, and health programming. You will find abstracts and videos / interviews from several conferences, an electronic journal (free), bibliographies and further links. [according to site editor’s information] ... [supplemented]
"As part of the Twenty Ten project, this website is dedicated to reporting on African football, related issues and the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa from an African perspective, including audio, video, photo, and text. The topics are inventive and often off the beaten path. Content from African journalists – called the All Stars – representing 34 nationalities will be published on this site, including written articles, images, broadcasts and multimedia productions. " [according to site editor’s information] ... [supplemented]
"Africa Media Online is offering the most comprehensive pan-African features coverage of Africa's first World Cup, with over 100 journalists in 34 African countries producing in-depth, fairly timeless features relating to African football and the impact of the 2010 FIFA World Cup on African life. Over 300 features - images, text, audio and multimedia - will be produced by the Twenty Ten project." [according to site editor’s information] ... [supplemented]
Private homepage about Malawi by Matt Dearing. Especially the interviews he made are interesting: with former Minister of Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs under Bakili Maluzi's administration, persons involved in sports (women's soccer, sports education for children), education (orphanage, AIDS orphans), scholars, the church, the police, everyday people (introductory text + videos). ... [editors ilissAfrica]