Since its launch in 2007, the Hungarian journal of African sStudies [Afrika Tanulmanyok] has been published minimum three times annually as an interdisciplinary scientific outlet for African studies. Every year since 2018, fully English-language issues with quality scientific papers and field reports have been added to the English-abstracted Hungarian-language volumes. The journal focuses on intriguing topics about the past and present of African societies, as well as looks at the place and possible roles of African actors in the changing international system of the 21st century. From 2021 on, the renewed HJAS intends to become one of the acclaimed journals edited from East-Central Europe, published at least twice in Hungarian, and once in ...
This article offers a portrait of the journal Africa Spectrum (known through 2008 as Afrika Spectrum...
This article describes the origins, the development as well as the current situation of African St...
It is said, according to the Afrikan Proverb: “Until the Lions have their own historians tales of h...
Numéro de projet relié au soutien financier du CRDI n’a pu être déterminéAfrika Zamani est un périod...
Africa is the leading interdisciplinary journal for the study of African society and culture. Discov...
The scholarly journal has been a means of disseminating information and communicating acquired knowl...
The paper gives a short overview of the history of Hungarian research concerning Africa which has be...
African Journals OnLine (AJOL) is the world\u27s largest and pre-eminent collection of peer-reviewed...
Hikodmen is a journal of African Humanities, with contributions written exclusively in African langu...
bas appeared for five years, and this issue is the first number of Volume 6. Because NJAS is not nar...
An international academic journal, which publishes original and innovative studies and research in v...
Journals are the backbone of scholarly work. They provide a medium through which scholars of all age...
Publishing a scholarly peer reviewed journal poses some unique challenges for many African countries...
African Journal of History and Culture (AJHC) is an open access journal that provides rapid publicat...
Scholarly publishing in Africa, though still struggling to keep pace with the rest of the world, has...
This article offers a portrait of the journal Africa Spectrum (known through 2008 as Afrika Spectrum...
This article describes the origins, the development as well as the current situation of African St...
It is said, according to the Afrikan Proverb: “Until the Lions have their own historians tales of h...
Numéro de projet relié au soutien financier du CRDI n’a pu être déterminéAfrika Zamani est un périod...
Africa is the leading interdisciplinary journal for the study of African society and culture. Discov...
The scholarly journal has been a means of disseminating information and communicating acquired knowl...
The paper gives a short overview of the history of Hungarian research concerning Africa which has be...
African Journals OnLine (AJOL) is the world\u27s largest and pre-eminent collection of peer-reviewed...
Hikodmen is a journal of African Humanities, with contributions written exclusively in African langu...
bas appeared for five years, and this issue is the first number of Volume 6. Because NJAS is not nar...
An international academic journal, which publishes original and innovative studies and research in v...
Journals are the backbone of scholarly work. They provide a medium through which scholars of all age...
Publishing a scholarly peer reviewed journal poses some unique challenges for many African countries...
African Journal of History and Culture (AJHC) is an open access journal that provides rapid publicat...
Scholarly publishing in Africa, though still struggling to keep pace with the rest of the world, has...
This article offers a portrait of the journal Africa Spectrum (known through 2008 as Afrika Spectrum...
This article describes the origins, the development as well as the current situation of African St...
It is said, according to the Afrikan Proverb: “Until the Lions have their own historians tales of h...