Located on the slopes of Devil’s Peak in Cape Town, the University of Cape Town is a leading, research-intensive university in South Africa and on the continent, known for its academic excellence and pioneering scholarship. The university is home to a third of South Africa’s A-rated researchers (acknowledged by the Department of Science and Technology as international leaders in their field) and a fifth of the country’s national research chairs. UCT encourages students and staff to use their expertise to speed up social change and economic development across the country and continent, while pursuing the highest standards of excellence in academic knowledge and research: developing African solutions to African challenges that are also shared by developing nations around the world.
UCT, like the city of Cape Town, has a vibrant, cosmopolitan community drawn from all corners of South Africa. It also attracts students and staff from more than 100 countries in Africa and the rest of the world. The university has strong partnerships and networks with leading African and other international institutions - helping to enrich the academic, social and cultural diversity of the campus as well as to extend the reach of UCT’s academic work.
South Africa needs almost US$15 billion over a decade just to reach a basic level of climate adaptation, that protects water, food, health and infrastructure.
Diana Ferrus performing a poem. She proudly identified as Khoi and a descendant of the enslaved.
Screengrab/YouTube/Lief Vir Suid Afrika
The qualities forged by his intense involvement in the struggle for democratic practices shaped his approach to conflict and strife, wherever it occurred.
Dos du Dragon (Dragon’s back), Ivoini, Grande Comore. The Comoros Islands is particularly vulnerable to sea level rise.
Frans Sellies/Getty Images
Polluting companies in South Africa have had to pay a tax on their carbon emissions since 2019. This gives them a good incentive to reduce emissions.
The Komati power plant community in South Africa suffered after Eskom closed it down in 2022 because workers were not offered new jobs or retrained.
Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty Images
The South African government and coal industry need to move fast to set up a plan to turn old coal mines and power stations into job-creating hubs after they close.
Jubilee District Hospital in Pretoria, South Africa.
Photo by Felix Dlangamandla/Daily Maverick/Gallo Images via Getty Images
Zoheb Khan, Centro Brasileiro de Análise e Planejamento (CEBRAP); University of Johannesburg; Frederico Haddad, Centro Brasileiro de Análise e Planejamento (CEBRAP), and Leslie London, University of Cape Town
Contracting out healthcare requires state capacity and public participation.
Children playing rugby at Wynberg Boys.
Marc Wyllie, Wynberg Media
South Africa needs a renewable energy industrial strategy, not just requirements for green power projects to buy a percentage of solar parts from local companies.
Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Les mots traduisent le rapport de forces: quand il s'agit de retour des biens culturels, le terme “restititution”, contrairement à “raptriement” évoque la justice.
Falar em restituição não se trata de recuperar um passado perdido, que não pode ser restaurado, mas de criar novos futuros baseados na justiça, dignidade e respeito para comunidades em todo o mundo que ainda vivem com o legado da expropriação colonial.
Albert~nlwiki / Wikimedia Commons
Distinção não é questão acadêmica: repatriação dá ênfase a quem devolve, enquanto restituição muda foco para quem reivindica, afirma seus direitos e exige justiça.
Memorial stone for Sarah Bartmann, in South Africa.
Albert~nlwiki / Wikimedia Commons
Language shapes power and words like restitution, unlike repatriation, speak directly to justice when it comes to returning cultural heritage.
Dinosaur footprints at Morija, Lesotho, in 1906. The person standing in front of the rock slab covered with tridactyl fossil footprints is not identified.
Photos courtesy of the Institut des Sciences de l’Evolution of the University of Montpellier, France