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She worked as an economic researcher for the Ministry of Labour in Zimbabwe. From 1987 to 1990, she worked at the Lusaka office of the International Labour Organization. Sisulu returned to Johannesburg, South Africa, with her family in 1991 after the end of apartheid. She worked mainly as a freelance writer and editor from 1991 to 1998.[3]
In 1994, she wrote a children's book The Day Gogo Went to Vote, about the first democratic election held in South Africa. In 2002, she published a biography about her husband's parents, entitled Walter and Albertina Sisulu: In Our Lifetime, which received the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa and was runner-up for the Sunday Times Alan Paton Non-Fiction Award.
Her shorter writings include "A different kind of holocaust: a personal reflection on HIV/AIDS" (African Gender Institute Newsletter 7, University of Cape Town, December 2000)[3][4] and "The 50th anniversary of the 1956 Women's March: a personal recollection" (Feminist Africa, 2006).[5]
Sisulu wrote the foreword to Jestina Mukoko's 2016 book The Abduction and Trial of Jestina Mukoko: The Fight for Human Rights in Zimbabwe.[6]
Sisulu helped establish the Crisis Coalition of Zimbabwe and works in its Johannesburg office. She has prepared reports for the Independent Electoral Authority of South Africa and for the World Food Programme. She organized a symposium for Themba Lesizwe on Civil Society and Justice in Zimbabwe, held in Johannesburg in 2003.[3]
^Quoted in Wallace M. Alston, Michael Welker (eds), Reformed Theology: Identity and Ecumenicity II : Biblical Interpretation in the Reformed Tradition, Volume 2, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2007, p. 1.
^Sisulu, Elinor. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/48726015 "The 50th Anniversary of the 1956 Women's March: A Personal Recollection", Feminist Africa, no. 6, 2006, pp. 73–76. JSTOR. Retrieved 5 March 2024.