Narratives among Bantu in Africa are complicated by introductions of Western knowledge such as Information and Communications Technology. Narrative research suffers from and is challenged by the inferiorities due to colonialism and by African academia that rejects African Indigenous Knowledge Systems. Narrative research about Information and Communications Technology among Bantu requires a combination of Western methodology in the context of Afrocentric approaches, such as Ubuntu, to yield authentic and valid data. The challenge in introducing Western knowledge such as Information and Communications Technology into Bantu communities is to develop research hybrids that recognise Bantu Indigenous Knowledge Systems and use Western knowledge, w...
Since time immemorial, indigenous peoples around the world have developed knowledge systems to ensur...
This article was written as part of the research for a MTh degree that was done under supervision...
This paper emerges out of a panel discussion during a PhD week and subsequent 8th International Envi...
Narratives among Bantu in Africa are complicated by introductions of Western knowledge such as Infor...
Africa is the second-largest continent in the world (after Asia), making up around one-fifth of the ...
For decades, African researchers relied on Eurocentric concepts, models, philosophies, ethics, desig...
This paper discusses how Ubuntu as a philosophy and a methodology was used among Bantu in South Afri...
The article highlights the realities and dynamics facing researchers researching indigenous African ...
Drawing insight from Toyin Falola’s call for African scholars to Africanize knowledge, this paper is...
In the late 1990s and 2000s, a number of calls were made by scholars to “internationalize” or “dewes...
African Indigenous Knowledge Systems (AIKS) are values that were passed among African generations by...
This paper endeavours to uncover the distinctive and conservative nature of African cultural and ide...
Human knowledge within Western culture is generally adjudged to have reached its apogee in terms of ...
Body contact and body language reading are unique and existential and, although culturally dependent...
This article is of the view that current research and scholarship in pastoral theology in Africa is ...
Since time immemorial, indigenous peoples around the world have developed knowledge systems to ensur...
This article was written as part of the research for a MTh degree that was done under supervision...
This paper emerges out of a panel discussion during a PhD week and subsequent 8th International Envi...
Narratives among Bantu in Africa are complicated by introductions of Western knowledge such as Infor...
Africa is the second-largest continent in the world (after Asia), making up around one-fifth of the ...
For decades, African researchers relied on Eurocentric concepts, models, philosophies, ethics, desig...
This paper discusses how Ubuntu as a philosophy and a methodology was used among Bantu in South Afri...
The article highlights the realities and dynamics facing researchers researching indigenous African ...
Drawing insight from Toyin Falola’s call for African scholars to Africanize knowledge, this paper is...
In the late 1990s and 2000s, a number of calls were made by scholars to “internationalize” or “dewes...
African Indigenous Knowledge Systems (AIKS) are values that were passed among African generations by...
This paper endeavours to uncover the distinctive and conservative nature of African cultural and ide...
Human knowledge within Western culture is generally adjudged to have reached its apogee in terms of ...
Body contact and body language reading are unique and existential and, although culturally dependent...
This article is of the view that current research and scholarship in pastoral theology in Africa is ...
Since time immemorial, indigenous peoples around the world have developed knowledge systems to ensur...
This article was written as part of the research for a MTh degree that was done under supervision...
This paper emerges out of a panel discussion during a PhD week and subsequent 8th International Envi...