Surveillance Law in Africa: a review of six countries
This research will review how surveillance is legally defined, limited, and subject to oversight in six African countries: Nigeria, Senegal, Egypt, Sudan, Kenya and South Africa.
Showing 21–30 of 206 results
This research will review how surveillance is legally defined, limited, and subject to oversight in six African countries: Nigeria, Senegal, Egypt, Sudan, Kenya and South Africa.
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This paper explores efforts across Egyptian universities to enhance responsiveness and accountability for addressing and mitigating sexual harassment on campus. Though not a new phenomenon, harassment in Egyptian universities differs from other places in terms of scale, frequency, aggressiveness and the characteristics of perpetrators and survivors within the university settings.
Published by: Institute of Development Studies
This report introduces findings from ten digital rights landscape country reports on Zimbabwe, Zambia, Uganda, Sudan, South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, Egypt, and Cameroon. The country reports analyse how the openings and closings of online civic space affect citizens’ digital rights.
Sexual grooming is a highly complex and understudied phenomenon. It connotes a very particular type of power relationship. While poor...
A new IDS Bulletin examines the experiences of female-led activisms against sexual harassment in articles that cover 11 countries around...
This CREID Working Paper paper endeavours to make visible the targeting of poor women from religious minorities in contexts where...