Books • 2020:
Travelling While Black: Essays Inspired by a Life on the Move – a collection of essays published by
Hurst Publishers. The essays analyse the radicalised experience of travelling as "a middle-class, mobile, Black African female" The book was positively received and featured in
The Times Literary Supplement and
NPR among others. Ranka Primorac writes that the book "has sharp and urgent things to say about racism in America, xenophobia in Africa, and the future of Pan-Africanism". A review in
African Studies Quarterly described it as a "highly refreshing, innovative, and descriptive narrative sheds light on contemporary Kenya, highlighting the impact of technology on its political and social systems".
Business Daily Africa, between the lines podcast from the
Institute of Development Studies and the Africa Oxford Initiative podcast at the University of Oxford. Nyabola has given book talks at numerous universities including the
Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at
Harvard University, the
University of the Witwatersrand,
School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, Stanford University Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society and the
University of Cambridge. The book is cited in a
Financial Times article on the fight to control Africa's digital revolution. • 2018:
Where Women Are: Gender & The 2017 Kenyan Elections (co-edited with
Marie-Emmanuelle Pommerolle) was published by
Heinrich-Boell-Stiftung and
Twaweza Communications Ltd. • 2022:
Strange and Difficult Times: Notes on a Global Pandemic was published by
Hurst Publishers. The essays address the global
COVID-19 pandemic from Nyabola's vantage point in
East Africa and as a global traveler subjected to lockdown. Interspersed with a personal account she also "examines the biases, assumptions and failures in Western responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, and touches on the ways in which the pandemic has exacerbated global inequalities." An excerpt was published in
The Johannesburg Review of Books.
Book chapters • "Testimony as Text: Performative Vulnerability and the Limits of Legalistic Approaches to Refugee Protection". In
African Women Under Fire: Literary Discourses in War and Conflict, published in 2017 by
Rowman & Littlefield. • "Media Perspectives: Social Media and New Narratives: Kenyans Tweet Back". Chapter in ''Africa's Media Image in the 21st Century: From the 'Heart of Darkness' to 'Africa Rising','' published in 2016 by
Routledge Papers • Nyabola, Nanjala. “Kenyan Feminisms in the Digital Age.”
Women’s Studies Quarterly, vol. 46, no. 3 & 4, 2018, pp. 261–72.
JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26511346. Accessed 7 June 2024. == References ==