Equality for All
Listen. Across markets, back alleys, community halls and living rooms from Nairobi to Lagos, people are telling themselves who they are. Equality for All was our invitation to listen more carefully. It began as a question: what happens when the people most affected by unfair laws, slow courts, unequal economies and quiet everyday exclusions are given space to tell their stories in their own language and in their own voices? The campaign grew into a living archive of testimony, witness and imagination. It is a map of justice made of sound, text, film and the rhythms of ordinary life. The work we published was never meant to lecture. It was meant to reframe. It was meant to turn data into faces, policy into pulse, and statistics into songs.
Stories do the work that reports cannot. They translate law into lives, policy into possibility. If justice is to be more than a word, we must let the people most intimate with its absence define what it looks like.
Africa is home to roughly one and a half billion people, a fact that makes the stakes of justice and equality continental in scale (Our World in Data). Seventy percent of Sub-Saharan Africa’s population is under the age of thirty, representing a powerful demographic force. Young voices are not only the future; they are the majority present (United Nations). Internet access across the continent is expanding rapidly but unevenly. While large national markets now count tens of millions of users, many rural areas remain chronically offline. Nonetheless, the use of social platforms and audio streaming continues to rise each year (DataReportal – Global Digital Insights). Most of the world’s extreme poverty is concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa, and this economic pressure shapes how people experience justice, mobility, and voice (World Bank). Public perception also plays a critical role. Recent Afrobarometer data shows that a majority of respondents believe people are often or always treated unequally under the law, and many perceive discrimination based on economic status. These perceptions shape civic trust and the appetite for change.
Today, the impact of ‘Equality for All’ continues to grow, with stories being shared in classrooms, youth forums, and community spaces, sparking deeper conversations and inspiring collective action.
Stories of Change: Journeys Toward Justice and Equality
Aurora: The Dawn of a New Life
Tilottama Chowdhury India Aurora: The Dawn of a New Life She stopped and looked at the glass window of the clothes store. To anyone, she would seem to be just another girl looking at the holiday sale prices. But they were wrong. She stood there looking at her...
The 7 Train
Xi Richard Chen New York City, New York, United States of America The 7 Train I walk down the steps into the subway station, looking for the 7 train. Commuters push past me in a fury of elbows and shoulders. A waterfall of languages clangs in my ears. The 7...
Finding it
Omotayo Olayinka Aremu Nigeria Finding it The rain poured on Tricania for two hours. The ground was marshy, and vendors lining the train- track wrapped up to keep warm. Beyond the cold was a piercing chill; the presence of soldiers, guns and amour tanks. A...
Yellow lilies.
Antonia Patricia Herrera Veas. Lampa, Chile Yellow lilies. My brother tells me he wants to fly: all kinds of futuristic cities, robots, flying cars, cross my mind as I lay on my soft, cozy bed. Then I look around and find myself surrounded by buildings full of...
Deja Vu
Michael Ogumbe Kenya Deja Vu “No matter what, mum, promise you won't let go, I am certain help is on its way..." Mwangi pleaded. "It is over, my son, it is over. Promise me one thing, though: You won't change. Even on this day, when I am leaving you," his...
Room 807
Ogalo Jane Kenya Room 807 Today, I felt unmotivated about going to work after the morning I had. I hoped my boss would not notice the black eye that I tried to cover up with makeup. After welcoming her last client, the building felt so quiet that I could hear the...










