Published: 12 Jul 2024 400 views
Marking the third cohort of the fellowship program, the Limbo Project will provoke journalistic discourse surrounding ethnic minorities, migrants, refugees, waterfront communities, and related marginalized groups contending with uncertainty across Africa. As we cognize it, these groups exist in a state of limbo. Nonetheless, Limbo equally transcends physical space; it is a framework and experience shaped by the failings of democratic societies to safeguard their most vulnerable groups.
This edition of the Limbo Fellowship focuses on five countries; Mozambique, Mauritius, Uganda, Nigeria, and Tanzania. These countries embody communities whose narratives often languish in obscurity or neglect, yet form an integral part of our societies.
In Tanzania for example, Maasai people have faced a series of evictions since 1959 and in January 2024, the government altered the legal status of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) to prohibit human settlement, a move that could displace around 100,000 people. In a distressing parallel, in March 2016, Nigeria initiated a series of forced and violent evictions targeting waterfront communities. Over 50,000 people have been displaced in Lagos alone since then, with several individuals losing their lives or falling victim to drowning while fleeing gunfire during these evictions.
The failure to address this challenge is compounded by how spaces of limbo and individuals experiencing it are portrayed in the media. Limbo is often criminalized, misunderstood, and shunned. However, it is essential to contemplate what becomes possible when we embrace limbo from a storytelling perspective. What future narratives can be crafted as we witness communities rising up for themselves, even in the face of profound uncertainty?
As with previous editions of the fellowship, fellows will produce multimedia stories focused on these communities that will be published on the Minority Africa platform as well as through our network of around 300 news publishers and academics through our Advance project.
The Minority Africa Fellowship, a project by Minority Africa — a digital publication using data-driven multimedia journalism to tell African minority stories — targets journalists and storytellers from minority groups across Africa providing them with the platform, skill, and mentorship to report stories from and about their communities. Through an intensive six-month paid program, fellows will polish their existing reporting abilities both from a skill and thematic perspective but will also be trained on the intersecting areas and groups of focus for the fellowship. T...... continue reading
Application Deadline | 19 Jul 2024 |
Country to study | Mozambique, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda |
Type | Fellowship |
Sponsor | Minority Africa Fellowship |
Gender | Men and Women |
Besides their allowance, fellows will be provided with a monthly internet stipend. We are also continually working on a way to potentially eliminate the need for a strong internet connection in subsequent cohorts of the fellowship.
The Minority Africa fellowship is open to journalists, filmmakers, writers, photographers, and storytellers. Here is a complete list of the eligibility requirements below:
For more details, visit Minority Africa Fellowship website.