Standing regional desks · Five sub-Saharan and North African regions
Regions
The Corridor organises its coverage around five standing regional desks. East Africa, Southern Africa and North Africa publish actively. West Africa and Central Africa launch in 2026. Each desk applies the publication's six analytical lenses to the specific tourism architecture of its region — the connectivity it depends on, the political economy that shapes it, and the global flows that pass through it.
The Corridor's regional desks
Five regions
East Africa
Active · 6 issues
The most analytically active African tourism region of 2026. The visa-free pivot, the gateway competition between Nairobi and Addis Ababa, and the Mara migration crisis. Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia.
All six lenses covered · Founding region
Southern Africa
Active · 3 issues
Where The Hague, the diesel pump and the regional aviation market intersect. The publication's most diplomatically and economically textured beat. South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe.
Conflict · Economics · Connectivity covered
North Africa
Active · 1 issue
Casablanca's gateway ambitions are reshaping the continent's mobility corridor. Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia each operate distinctive tourism architectures inside Mediterranean political economy.
Connectivity covered · More to follow
West Africa
Launching 2026
Lagos as a global city. The Gulf of Guinea connectivity gap. ECOWAS political instability and what it means for tourism flows. Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire and beyond.
Coverage launching · Subscribe to be notified
Central Africa
Launching 2026
The Congo Basin holds the world's second-largest tropical forest. Conservation finance, gorilla tourism and the geopolitical fragility that shapes one of the highest per-capita tourism revenue regions on the continent.
Coverage launching · Subscribe to be notified
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