UPS stumbles into holiday season amid shifting trade rules | Trade War

UPS stumbles into holiday season amid shifting trade rules | Trade War

New York City, United States – Since the recent termination of the nearly decade-old trade rule called “de minimis,” United States consumers and businesses have been exposed to slower shipping, destroyed packages and steep tariff fees on international goods – foreshadowing what could make for a chaotic holiday shopping season. For major international carrier UPS,…

Read More
Shifting shopper trends put pressure on retail connectivity

Shifting shopper trends put pressure on retail connectivity

Retail in South Africa is changing. As customers become more digitally empowered, the traditional, staff-led in-store experience is being replaced with self-service, smartphone-driven journeys. Tobie van Schalkwyk, Business Unit Lead at Duxbury Networking. Image supplied Shoppers want speed, independence, and seamless access to the same product information and services they have online. But while most…

Read More
Africa: Renegotiating Patriarchy – Women’s Assets and Shifting Gender Roles During the Sudan War

Africa: Renegotiating Patriarchy – Women’s Assets and Shifting Gender Roles During the Sudan War

The Sudan War series is a joint collaboration between the Center for Economic, Legal, and Social Studies and Documentation – Khartoum (CEDEJ-K), Sudan-Norway Academic Cooperation (SNAC) and African Arguments – Debating Ideas. Through a number of themes that explore the intersections of war, displacement, identities and capital, Sudanese researchers, many of whom are themselves displaced,…

Read More
Africa: Renegotiating Patriarchy – Women’s Assets and Shifting Gender Roles During the Sudan War

Africa: The International Order Is Shifting – African Countries Have an Opportunity to Reshape Global Power Relations

For too long, Africa’s agency has been exercised defensively: managing expectations, preserving stability, reacting to external scripts. The continent has copied political systems from other countries and prioritised economic choices that would meet external obligations, such as repaying debt. This posture was understandable immediately following independence in African states. At that time, the world was…

Read More