This paper investigates the epistemic politics at work in radically contrasting academic representations of African university futures. Euro-American policy entrepreneurs and research funders call for major investments in Africa’s scientific research training capacity to strengthen the continent’s integration into a global knowledge system. Meanwhile, African social scientists and humanities scholars critique the epistemological hegemony of ‘Western’ models of the academy, and call for the decolonisation of African universities. This paper sets out a three-step approach to dealing with the politicisation of ‘academography’ (Thorkelson 2016) in this decolonial moment. The first step is to acknowledge how epistemic power relations shape all ...
In discussing African studies or any other field, it is important to note that the economies and cul...
One of the difficult questions facing the continent of Africa today is the question of whether the p...
Post-colonial curricula in African Universities continue to dislocate the Africans under the school ...
This chapter is a theoretical exposition of the African university education system that is characte...
Higher education, and education generally, is a prime site for the transmission, facilitation, devel...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
This paper argues that education in Africa is the victim of a Western epistemological export that ta...
Aim. The purpose of this article is to challenge the notion that a largely Eurocentric education is ...
The article argues for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher educatio...
‘Africanisation’ of higher education is generally understood to involve institutional transformation...
This article discusses the manufactured absence of African epistemologies, what we refer to as ‘epis...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
For a long time, African Studies as a discipline has been spearheaded by academics and institutions ...
Abstract: Institutions of high learning constitute key sites of knowledge and occupy a significant a...
We are currently witnessing the increased diversification of the field of academic knowledge product...
In discussing African studies or any other field, it is important to note that the economies and cul...
One of the difficult questions facing the continent of Africa today is the question of whether the p...
Post-colonial curricula in African Universities continue to dislocate the Africans under the school ...
This chapter is a theoretical exposition of the African university education system that is characte...
Higher education, and education generally, is a prime site for the transmission, facilitation, devel...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
This paper argues that education in Africa is the victim of a Western epistemological export that ta...
Aim. The purpose of this article is to challenge the notion that a largely Eurocentric education is ...
The article argues for a new way of thinking about knowledge construction in African higher educatio...
‘Africanisation’ of higher education is generally understood to involve institutional transformation...
This article discusses the manufactured absence of African epistemologies, what we refer to as ‘epis...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
For a long time, African Studies as a discipline has been spearheaded by academics and institutions ...
Abstract: Institutions of high learning constitute key sites of knowledge and occupy a significant a...
We are currently witnessing the increased diversification of the field of academic knowledge product...
In discussing African studies or any other field, it is important to note that the economies and cul...
One of the difficult questions facing the continent of Africa today is the question of whether the p...
Post-colonial curricula in African Universities continue to dislocate the Africans under the school ...