Recent work-family (WF) meta-analyses have all but left out the scholarship of and about work and family intersections in Africa (Allen, French, Dumani, & Shockley, 2015; Shockley, Douek, Smith, Yu, Dumani, & French, 2017). Yet WF research is accumulating in South Africa, Ghana, and other African nations (Hoobler & Koekemoer, 2018). And characteristics of certain African cultures suggest that work and family may be more intertwined and family may play a larger role in work for people in African nations, as opposed to nations in the Global North (Aryee, 2005), based on higher degrees of collectivism (vs individualism) and femininity (vs masculinity). To date, what we know about work and family in Africa has taken a somewhat piece-meal approach. For example, new research has been performed just on entrepreneurial women in sub-Saharan Africa (Wolf & Freese, 2018), domestic workers in South Africa (Hoobler, 2016), and a new conflict measure just for South African workers (Koekemoer, Mostert, & Rothmann, 2010). We ask whether it is time to take stock of the literature as a whole. Just as Nkomo (2011) asked if there is or can be an African way of leading, is there an Afro-centric version of work and family intersections? Is this unique? What can be learned from studying work and family in African contexts?