Back in 2000 Gavin Kitching sparked a major debate about giving up African Studies, his main argument being that African studies had become depressing, because the leaders he had supported during anti-colonial and anti-apartheid struggles had become the tyrants, keeping their countries and peoples subjugated and in poverty. His departure from the field of African studies flowed on the tide of Australian academics moving toward more mainstream fields of study including Asian studies, keeping job prospects open rather than closed. A rational choice in the face of an irrational Africa! A decade has passed since Kitching's 'depressing' announcement, and if only for the sake of assisting in the resettlement of former African refugees and African...
The call for ‘Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance ’ continues to echo in the ivory towers of the ...
This article argues that Africa's quest for ‘catch-up’ and economic development dates as...
For a long time, African Studies as a discipline has been spearheaded by academics and institutions ...
This paper will argue that the role of education in Australia’s relationship with Africa is currentl...
With the renewed emphasis on higher education as an agent for development and economic growth, Austr...
This paper will compare the availability of relevant courses and topics in the Australian and New Ze...
Africa has often been defined and represented by outsiders. In International Studies, the continent ...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Sahar...
Africa has been engulfed with a lot of development challenges despite the endowment of natural resou...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Saharan...
It is in part because of widespread concerns about the magnitude and posited intractability of probl...
Australia's engagement with Africa during the Rudd and Gillard governments was primarily driven by t...
Over the past two decades, people with African backgrounds have become part of Australian society. T...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Saharan...
African Studies has evolved as an academic initiative dealing with research and scholarship on the c...
The call for ‘Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance ’ continues to echo in the ivory towers of the ...
This article argues that Africa's quest for ‘catch-up’ and economic development dates as...
For a long time, African Studies as a discipline has been spearheaded by academics and institutions ...
This paper will argue that the role of education in Australia’s relationship with Africa is currentl...
With the renewed emphasis on higher education as an agent for development and economic growth, Austr...
This paper will compare the availability of relevant courses and topics in the Australian and New Ze...
Africa has often been defined and represented by outsiders. In International Studies, the continent ...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Sahar...
Africa has been engulfed with a lot of development challenges despite the endowment of natural resou...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Saharan...
It is in part because of widespread concerns about the magnitude and posited intractability of probl...
Australia's engagement with Africa during the Rudd and Gillard governments was primarily driven by t...
Over the past two decades, people with African backgrounds have become part of Australian society. T...
In this farewell lecture on the occasion of his departure as Professor of Development in sub-Saharan...
African Studies has evolved as an academic initiative dealing with research and scholarship on the c...
The call for ‘Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance ’ continues to echo in the ivory towers of the ...
This article argues that Africa's quest for ‘catch-up’ and economic development dates as...
For a long time, African Studies as a discipline has been spearheaded by academics and institutions ...