Zambia has announced a plan to standardize mining practices between African countries to keep foreign companies from overstepping labor standards.
Don't waste your time reading all the "where to travel in 2014" lists. We’ve added them together to come up with a general consensus!
From the newsmakers to the movers and shakers, these 14 destinations will all bask in the spotlight in 2014.
Fischer is well-known in international economic policy. At MIT, Fischer once taught current Fed Chairman Bernanke and ECB President Draghi.
Leaders of Africa's biggest copper producer are ordering China’s Nonferrous Mining Corporation to halt production over environmental and worker concerns.
What’s a “PANK”? How about a “microstay”? These are but two of many new travel trends you can expect in 2014.
African governments raised a record $8 billion in bonds this year, contributing to the continent's exposure to global financial breakdowns.
Africans living in South Korea were also angered by the advertisement.
New images taken by hunters in Zimbabwe indicate widespread poisoning of elephants, and the crisis may include more than just small-fry poachers.
A report shows the predominance of mobile over broadband Internet connection worldwide, and the importance of young, tech-savvy consumers.
Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Botswana and Zambia are among the African nations adjusting to the continent's surge in Islamic banking.
Researchers from the University of Exeter have found that African cuckoo finches hide their eggs in nests of African tawny-flanked prinia who land up hatching and raising the young as their own.
International partners would prefer not to channel their money through the SADC.
Zimbabwe announced plans this week for a $300 million theme park by Victoria Falls, which officials likened to “Disneyland in Africa.”
Notorious despot Robert Mugabe is co-hosting the biannual UNWTO summit on the Zimbabwe-Zambia border at Victoria Falls.
Brazil announced it will cancel the debt of 12 African countries, but the reasons behind the decision are not entirely clear.
Zambian President Michael Sata is becoming more and more restrictive.
With better technology and smarter science, Africa could solve its own hunger problem.
Mandela has already lived more than four decades longer than his fellow countrymen.
The George W. Bush Institute in Dallas and the White House both have declared that the concurrent trips to Africa by two US presidents was simply coincidental
The BRCK is a unique new tool that can help Africans get connected to the internet wherever they are.
Michigan native and former river guide Paul Templer described an incident in which he was swallowed by a hippo on the Zambezi River in Africa.