The Africa Museum in Tervuren, Brussels, reopened its doors after a closure of five years. What precisely is on view in the refurbished museum? And how do the choices made by the museum relate to wider discussions in anthropology and museology on decolonization and repatriation? In Belgium, it seems, working towards cooperation between all parties involved is far from finished.
Presenting a history of slavery that resonates with multiple audiences and serves necessary educatio...
Reckoning with colonial legacies in Western museum collections What are the possibilities and lim...
International audienceThe article addresses the role of European museums in the process of circulati...
By examining one ‘ethnographic’ object kept at the Royal Museum for Central Africa, this article dis...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Making African Connections was a two-year research project inspired by calls for the return of Afric...
"Decolonising Museums is the second thematic publication of L'Internationale Online; it addresses co...
Award date: 15 June 2023Supervisor: Stone, Diane, European University InstituteA museum should be a ...
Until very recently, the Royal Museum for Central Africa, in Belgium, a national institution once de...
The Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, now called AfricaMuseum, reopened in December 2018 ...
As African nations search for means to establish viable and authentic cultural identities, an increa...
Tervuren. The Belgian Mirror The paper describes the history and the ideology of the Royal Museum f...
If decolonisation merely meant independence for a colony, it would lie in the distant past. Nowadays...
In February 2016, students at the University of Cambridge voted unanimously to support the repatriat...
In February 2016, students at Jesus College, Cambridge voted unanimously to repatriate to Nigeria a ...
Presenting a history of slavery that resonates with multiple audiences and serves necessary educatio...
Reckoning with colonial legacies in Western museum collections What are the possibilities and lim...
International audienceThe article addresses the role of European museums in the process of circulati...
By examining one ‘ethnographic’ object kept at the Royal Museum for Central Africa, this article dis...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Making African Connections was a two-year research project inspired by calls for the return of Afric...
"Decolonising Museums is the second thematic publication of L'Internationale Online; it addresses co...
Award date: 15 June 2023Supervisor: Stone, Diane, European University InstituteA museum should be a ...
Until very recently, the Royal Museum for Central Africa, in Belgium, a national institution once de...
The Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, now called AfricaMuseum, reopened in December 2018 ...
As African nations search for means to establish viable and authentic cultural identities, an increa...
Tervuren. The Belgian Mirror The paper describes the history and the ideology of the Royal Museum f...
If decolonisation merely meant independence for a colony, it would lie in the distant past. Nowadays...
In February 2016, students at the University of Cambridge voted unanimously to support the repatriat...
In February 2016, students at Jesus College, Cambridge voted unanimously to repatriate to Nigeria a ...
Presenting a history of slavery that resonates with multiple audiences and serves necessary educatio...
Reckoning with colonial legacies in Western museum collections What are the possibilities and lim...
International audienceThe article addresses the role of European museums in the process of circulati...