'Rule of gerontocracy has ended': Africa will no longer be 'lorded over by moral rule of old men'

rss · France 24 2026-05-12T11:08:23Z en
To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement. One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. To watch this content, you may need to disable it on this site. Issued on: 12/05/2026 - 13:08 On the sidelines of the Africa Forward Summit at Strathmore University, François Picard is pleased to welcome celebrated historian and political theorist Achille Mbembe. He offers deep insight into a continent in the midst of profound psychological, sociopolitical and economic transformation. Author of The Earthly Community and one of Africa’s leading voices on postcolonial sovereignty, Mr. Mbembe argues that while institutional change is slow-moving,  a seismic change is underway: “What has ended is the rule of gerontocracy, It has ended in the minds of the people. That is what matters.” For Mbembe, contemporary Africa is neither a story of collapse nor uncomplicated renewal, but a continent moving “in multiple directions at the same time,” where “chaotic situations, almost cataclysmic” coexist with “attempts at reinventing democracy from below.” Driven increasingly by young people, women, intellectuals, and civil society actors, these struggles, he argues, may determine whether Africa’s new sovereignty becomes merely another scramble for resources, or the foundation of more open, durable societies. Ultimately, Mbembe insists that Africa’s future will not be built on deficit narratives, but on civilisational confidence: “Africa must build not on the basis of what it lacks, but on the basis of what it already has.” On the same topic

Knowledge Graph

Situations
Entities
Highlight