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CGHR and CAS event - Decolonising African Studies?

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  • UserProfessor Christopher Clapham, University of Cambridge
  • ClockWednesday 06 November 2019, 17:00-19:00
  • HouseRoom S1, ARB.

If you have a question about this talk, please contact cm2007@cam.ac.uk.

This talk has been canceled/deleted

Insistent calls to ‘decolonise’ African studies beg the question of what this quest actually involves. If it refers to an attempt to understand the continent’s diverse and complex societies that builds on their indigenous structures and values, this was a task initiated during the decolonisation era of the 1950s and early 1960s. Led by historians and drawing heavily on insights from anthropology, it led to a revolution in the understanding of Africa, which nonetheless failed to maintain its impetus as a result of the political authoritarianism and economic decay of the post-independence period, which had a particularly damaging impact on Africa’s universities. Of late, however, the phrase has come to refer to developments notably in North America and Europe, which in subordinating the study of Africa to agendas in the global north may appropriately be described not as decolonisation but as recolonisation.

This talk will be jointly hosted by the Centre of African Studies and the Centre for Governance and Human Rights.

Speaker

Professor Christopher Clapham: Emeritus Professor, University of Cambridge, Centre of African Studies; Author, The Horn of Africa: State Formation and Decay

This talk is part of the Centre of Governance and Human Rights Events series.

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