The establishment of written records and archives in Africa has somehow eclipsed and even replaced oral traditions which were the norm on the continent. Prior to colonisation, entitlements to wealth, land and succession, among other things, were all transmitted orally. Thus the establishment of written records and/or archives, which deliberately excluded African people’s entitlements and rights, established the settlers and their governments as the rightful and legitimate owners and custodians of wealth, land and rule in Africa. This article postulates that archives and records were used by settlers to dismantle traditional African governance systems and also establish and legitimise settler rule. In conducting the relevant study, which w...
Archives have become acceptable evidence in the context of land restitution to prove events that occ...
Ellen Ndeshi Namhila is intrigued by the question: Why can the National Archives of Namibia respond ...
Some historians have always erred in ignoring oral history methods, as it is always assumed wrongly ...
Colonial historians writing on Africa believed that before colonization, Africa had no history. When...
Archives and the archivists are critical elements in the construction and reconstruction of social h...
In the mid-20th century, Africanist historians who had turned to oral tradition as a source of evide...
Argues that archives are as much about retrieving and using documents as about collecting and storin...
This article will chronicle how those professionals called archivist, charged with collecting, prese...
Zimbabwe became a colony of the British Empire on 13 September 1890, and attained independence in 19...
When President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa announced his dream for Africa and called it the African ...
The growth of African family history and chieftainship wrangles have placed archivists under increas...
Part of a special issue on international perspectives on education and decolonization. The writer ex...
The Tshwao or San people, formally known as Bushmen, are believed to have been the first people to s...
The article traces archival development in Zimbabwe from the colonial to the postcolonial periods. L...
There are two types of Africa. The first is a place where people and cultures live. The second is th...
Archives have become acceptable evidence in the context of land restitution to prove events that occ...
Ellen Ndeshi Namhila is intrigued by the question: Why can the National Archives of Namibia respond ...
Some historians have always erred in ignoring oral history methods, as it is always assumed wrongly ...
Colonial historians writing on Africa believed that before colonization, Africa had no history. When...
Archives and the archivists are critical elements in the construction and reconstruction of social h...
In the mid-20th century, Africanist historians who had turned to oral tradition as a source of evide...
Argues that archives are as much about retrieving and using documents as about collecting and storin...
This article will chronicle how those professionals called archivist, charged with collecting, prese...
Zimbabwe became a colony of the British Empire on 13 September 1890, and attained independence in 19...
When President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa announced his dream for Africa and called it the African ...
The growth of African family history and chieftainship wrangles have placed archivists under increas...
Part of a special issue on international perspectives on education and decolonization. The writer ex...
The Tshwao or San people, formally known as Bushmen, are believed to have been the first people to s...
The article traces archival development in Zimbabwe from the colonial to the postcolonial periods. L...
There are two types of Africa. The first is a place where people and cultures live. The second is th...
Archives have become acceptable evidence in the context of land restitution to prove events that occ...
Ellen Ndeshi Namhila is intrigued by the question: Why can the National Archives of Namibia respond ...
Some historians have always erred in ignoring oral history methods, as it is always assumed wrongly ...