Nanjala Nyabola

Kenyan writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nanjala Nyabola is a Kenyan writer, political analyst, and activist based in Nairobi, Kenya.[1][2]

OccupationWriter and political analyst
NationalityKenyan
Quick facts Occupation, Nationality ...
Nanjala Nyabola
OccupationWriter and political analyst
NationalityKenyan
EducationKianda School; University of Birmingham; University of Oxford; Harvard Law School
Website
nanjalawrites.com
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Career

Nyabola writes extensively about African society and politics, technology, international law, and feminism for academic and non-academic publications. Her first book Digital Democracy, Analogue Politics: How the Internet Era is Transforming Kenya (Zed Books, 2018) was described as "a must read for all researchers and journalists writing about Kenya today".[3]

Nyabola held a Rhodes Scholarship at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford in 2009,[4] was part of the 2017 inaugural cohort of Foreign Policy Interrupted Fellows,[5] and was a 2017 Logan Nonfiction Program Fellow at the Carey Institute for Global Good.[6]

Nyabola sits on the board of Amnesty International Kenya.[7]

Education

Nyabola holds multiple degrees in politics and law:[5]

Journalism

Nyabola writes extensively about African society and politics, in particular Kenya, alongside discussions of technology, international law, and feminism. Her work has featured in publications and outlets including African Arguments,[9] Al Jazeera,[10] Financial Times,[11] Foreign Affairs,[12] Foreign Policy,[13] The Guardian,[14] New African,[15] The New Humanitarian,[16] The New Inquiry,[17] New Internationalist,[18] OkayAfrica[19] and World Policy Journal.[20]

Her 2014 Al Jazeera opinion piece "Why do Western media get Africa wrong?"[21] generated much discussion,[22][23][24][25][26][27][28] including on the BBC World Service[29] and in a 2014 McGill University course syllabus on Western representations of Africa in media and pop culture.[30]

Her 2010 Guardian opinion piece "Why, as an African, I took a Rhodes scholarship"[31] was chosen as one of the 5 Best Wednesday Columns in The Atlantic.[32]

Public speaking

Nyabola at the Disruption Network Lab in Berlin, 2018
Laura Rosenberger, Uri Rosenthal, Andreas Michaelis, Nanjala Nyabola, Oliver della Costa Stuenkel in 2019

Nyabola is a frequent contributor to the BBC World Service, particularly on issues around Kenyan politics and technology.[29][33][34][35][36]

She is a prolific speaker at universities including discussions of African politics, specifically Kenya, migration, feminism, and the digital at the University of Edinburgh,[37] SOAS,[38][39] Stanford University.[40]

Nyabola has been an invited speaker at numerous international conferences on the politics of the digital, including re:publica 2018[41] and 2019,[42] the 2018 Forum on Internet Freedom in Africa,[43] and the 2019 RightsCon in Tunis.[44] She gave the opening keynote at the 2022 Association of Internet Researchers conference.[1]

Works

Books

Book chapters

  • "Testimony as Text: Performative Vulnerability and the Limits of Legalistic Approaches to Refugee Protection". In African Women Under Fire: Literary Discourses in War and Conflict, published in 2017 by Rowman & Littlefield.[65]
  • "Media Perspectives: Social Media and New Narratives: Kenyans Tweet Back". Chapter in Africa's Media Image in the 21st Century: From the 'Heart of Darkness' to 'Africa Rising', published in 2016 by Routledge

Papers

  • Nyabola, Nanjala. “Kenyan Feminisms in the Digital Age.” Women’s Studies Quarterly, vol. 46, no. 3 & 4, 2018, pp. 261–72. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26511346. Accessed 7 June 2024.

References

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