Open Access
Global Africa · Issue 11, 2025

Issue 11, 2025

ISSN: 3020-0458  ·  Published September 20, 2025
Miscellaneous
Varia
Vinginevyo
متفرقات
Issue 11, 2025 cover
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With this third varia issue, Global Africa continues its commitment to providing a space for debate and analysis devoted to the plurality of approaches and issues that cut across scientific disciplines in and from Africa. The first varia issue indeed laid the foundations for this opening; the second highlighted forms of resistance against gender-based violence in Africa; this new issue reaffirms the dynamism of the fields of knowledge, in constant evolution, characterized by the diversity of objects, terrains, and methods. The contributions, gathered here, reflect this dynamic, and their apparent heterogeneity does not conceal the coherence of the whole: each, in its own way, engages with transformation. This idea of transformation—the passage from one state to another—extends to domains as…
Issue Highlights
Thematic Focus Miscellaneous
Articles 9 peer-reviewed articles
Published September 20, 2025
Languages English · Français · Swahili · العربية
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Articles in this Issue

9 peer-reviewed articles
01
Editorial

Editorial 

With this third varia issue, Global Africa continues its commitment to providing a space for debate and analysis devoted to the plurality of approaches and issues that cut across s…

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06
Critical issues

The Tijâniyya and Economic Well-Being in Cameroon

The Tijâniyya, a Sufi brotherhood of Maghrebian origin, has played a crucial historical role in shaping sociopolitical and religious dynamics in Cameroon, particularly in predomina…

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07
Critical issues

Unemployment and Youth Employment in Senegal: A Scoping Review of Achievements, Shortcomings, and Structural Limitations of Public Policies

Senegal's population is predominantly young, with half of its inhabitants under the age of 19. The current trend, supported by an average annual population growth rate of 2.9%, sug…

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08
Critical issues

What “Wanting to See One’s Children Grow Up” Means for Youth Engaged in Cameroon’s Authoritarian Political Field

Drawing on the now-famous phrase by artist Longué Longué, “I want to see my children grow up”, this article examines the conditioning logics of actors involved in Cameroon’s politi…

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