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New Digital Archive on Lagos History
We are pleased to announce the launch of Our Lagos History, a digital archive dedicated to preserving and sharing historical records on Lagos. The archive can be assessed at www.ourlagoshistory.org. The collection includes letters, newspapers, photographs, and personal writings sourced from private archives. Some materials are presented in their original format, while others are incomplete due to their fragile condition. Our Lagos History makes Lagos history accessible to researchers, educators, and the wider public. We invite you to explore the stories, people, and ideas that have shaped the city.
Questions about the collection can be directed to the coordinators (Halimat Somotan and Mufutau Oluwasegun Jimoh) at ourlagoshistory@gmail.com.
Contact Information
Halimat Somotan and and Mufutau Oluwasegun Jimoh at ourlagoshistory@gmail.com.
Contact Email
ourlagoshistory@gmail.com
URL
http://ourlagoshistory.org
By:
Aaron Dorner
Tuesday, Mar 3, 2026
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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CALL FOR PAPERS, JOURNAL OF WEST AFRICAN HISTORY
CALL FOR PAPERS, JOURNAL OF WEST AFRICAN HISTORY
Journal of West African History•01/09/2025Announcement
Location
Michigan, United States
Subject Fields
African History / Studies
CALL FOR PAPERS, JOURNAL OF WEST AFRICAN HISTORY
Founding Editor-in-Chief: Nwando AchebeEditors: Saheed Aderinto, Trevor R. Getz, Toby Green, Vincent Hiribarren, Harry Nii Koney Odamtten. Book Review Editors: Mark Deets, Nana Kesse, Madina Thiam.
The Journal of West African History (JWAH) is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary research journal dedicated to publishing high-quality scholarship on West African history. Positioned at the forefront of new research, JWAH addresses representation gaps by fostering critical scholarship on topics such as women and gender, sexuality, slavery, oral history, popular and public culture, and religion. The editorial board invites submissions that engage diverse topical, theoretical, and methodological approaches. Committed to rigorous analysis and international in scope, JWAH offers a critical intervention in knowledge production. Each issue includes scholarly book reviews, and articles are published in English, French, and Portuguese, with African-language abstracts. JWAH is published by Michigan State University Press.
The editorial board invites scholars to submit original article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 10,000 words including endnotes) accompanied by an abstract that summarizes the argument and significance of the work. Review essays should engage the interpretation, meaning, or importance of an author’s argument for a wider scholarly audience. See what we have available for review on our Book Reviews page. Please contact our Book Review Editors at mark.deets@aucegypt.edu, madina.thiam@nyu.edu, or nkesse@clarku.edu for more information.
Manuscripts submitted to the Journal of West African History should be submitted online at https://ojs.msupress.org/index.php/JWAH/submission/wizard. In order to submit an article, you will have to create an account. The site will guide you through this process.
Contact Email
jwah@msu.edu
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major
Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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Announcing Journal of West African History, Volume 10, Issue 1
Journal of West African History
Announcement Type
Journal
Location
MI, United States
Announcing Journal of West African History, Volume 10, Issue 1
Founding Editor-in-Chief: Nwando AchebeAssociate Editors: Saheed Aderinto, Trevor R. Getz, Toby Green, Vincent Hiribarren, Harry Nii Koney Odamtten. Book Review Editors: Mark Deets, Madina Thiam, Nana Kesse.
Volume 10, Issue I, NOW AVAILABLE!
The Journal of West African History (JWAH) is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed research journal that publishes the highest quality articles on West African history. Located at the cutting edge of new scholarship on the social, cultural, economic, and political history of West Africa, JWAH fills a representational gap by providing a forum for serious scholarship and debate on women and gender, sexuality, slavery, oral history, popular and public culture, and religion. The editorial board encourages authors to explore a wide range of topical, theoretical, methodological, and empirical perspectives in new and exciting ways. The journal is committed to rigorous thinking and analysis; is international in scope; and offers a critical intervention about knowledge production. Scholarly reviews of current books in the field appear in every issue. JWAH publishes primarily in English but recently published its first French issue. JWAH also plans to publish articles in Portuguese and is experimenting with African-language abstracts in forthcoming issues. JWAH is published by Michigan State University Press.
Editor's Introduction
Nwando Achebe, “Amaechina”
Articles
Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, “Progressive Empire?: Liberian Agriculture, Black American Farming Experts and World War II Engaging Africa and the World”
Emmanuel Asiedu-Acquah, “Engaging Africa and the World”
Caroline Maguire, “Artification and Decolonization at the Musée d’Art Africain de l’IFAN, Dakar”
Sarah Zimmerman, “Legacies of French Colonial Militarization and Gender-Based Violence in the Sahel”
Riina Turtio, “Soviet Military Assistance to Mali and Guinea, 1958-1980”
Book Reviews
Transcripts of the Sacred in Nigeria: Beautiful, Monstrous, Ridiculous (by Nimi Wariboko), Reviewed by Tara Hollies.
State-building and National Militaries in Postcolonial West Africa: Decolonizing the Means of Coercion 1958–1974 (by Riina Turtio), Reviewed by Joe Gazeley.
Letters, Kinship, and Social Mobility in Nigeria (by Olufemi Vaughan), Reviewed by Lisa Lindsay.
Mieux vaut tard que jamais: Sur les traces de six tirailleurs guinéens fusillés à Clamecy en juin 1940 (by Daniel Couriol), Reviewed by Madia Thomson.
Decolonizing Independence: Statecraft in Nigeria's First Republic and Israeli Interventions (by Lynn Schler), reviewed by Rouven Kunstmann.
Submissions
The editorial board invites scholars to submit original article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 10,000 words including endnotes) accompanied by an abstract that summarizes the argument and significance of the work. Review essays should engage the interpretation, meaning, or importance of an author’s argument for a wider scholarly audience. Please contact our Book Review Editors at mark.deets@aucegypt.edu, madina.thiam@nyu.edu, or nkesse@clarku.edu for more information.
Contact Email:jwah@msu.edu
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major
Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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Announcing Journal of West African History, Volume VI, Issue II
Founding Editor-in-Chief: Nwando AchebeEditors: Saheed Aderinto, Trevor Getz, Vincent Hiribarren, and Harry OdamttenBook Review Editors: Mark Deets and Ndubueze Mbah
JWAH 6.2 NOW AVAILABLE ON JSTOR AND PROJECT MUSE!
The Journal of West African History (JWAH) is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed research journal that publishes the highest quality articles on West African history. Located at the cutting edge of new scholarship on the social, cultural, economic, and political history of West Africa, JWAH fills a representational gap by providing a forum for serious scholarship and debate on women and gender, sexuality, slavery, oral history, popular and public culture, and religion. The editorial board encourages authors to explore a wide range of topical, theoretical, methodological, and empirical perspectives in new and exciting ways. The journal is committed to rigorous thinking and analysis; is international in scope; and offers a critical intervention about knowledge production. Scholarly reviews of current books in the field appear in every issue. And the publication is in both English and French; an abstract in both languages will be provided. JWAH is published by Michigan State University Press.
Editor’s Note
Vincent Hiribarren, "African History Will Make Us Breathe"
Articles
Klas Rönnbäck, “The Built Environment of the Precolonial West African Coast: Materials, Functions, and Housing Standards”
Ismail Warscheid, “The West African Jihād Movements and the Islamic Legal Literature of the Southwestern Sahara (1650–1850)”
Holly Rose Ashford, “Modern Motherhood, Masculinity, and Family Planning in Ghana, 1960–75”
Retrospective
Jan Jansen and James R. Fairhead, “The Mande Creation Myth, by Germaine Dieterlen, as a Historical Source for the Mali Empire”
Conversations
Kwasi Konadu, “COVID-19 and Caution for Historians: Views from a Place in West Africa”
Karen Flint, “‘Africa Isn’t a Testing Lab’: Considering COVID Vaccine Trials in a History of Biomedical Experimentation and Abuse”
Alhaji U. Njai, “COVID-19 Pandemic at the Intersection of Ebola, Global Leadership, and the Opportunity to Decolonize the Political Economy of Sierra Leone”
Helen Tilley, “COVID-19 across Africa: Colonial Hangovers, Racial Hierarchies, and Medical Histories”
Book Reviews
Harry N. K. Odamtten, Edward W. Blyden’s Intellectual Transformations: Afropublicanism, Pan-Africanism, Islam, and the Indigenous West African Church, reviewed by Tracy Keith Flemming
Jonathan E. Robins, Cotton and Race across the Atlantic: Britain, Africa, and America, 1900–1920, reviewed by Andrew James Kettler
Emily S. Burrill, States of Marriage: Gender, Justice, and Rights in Colonial Mali, reviewed by Harmony O’Rourke
Katherine Ann Wiley, Work, Social Status, and Gender in Post-Slavery Mauritania, reviewed by Erin Pettigrew
Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, Mediators, Contract Men, and Colonial Capital: Mechanized Gold Mining Colony, 1879–1909, reviewed by Andrea Ringer
Submissions
The editorial board invites scholars to submit original article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 10,000 words including endnotes, 35 pages in length) accompanied by an abstract that summarizes the argument and significance of the work (not exceeding 150 words). Please see submission guidelines for detailed expectations. Review essays (not exceeding 1,000 words) should engage the interpretation, meaning, or importance of an author’s argument for a wider scholarly audience. See what we have available for review on our Book Reviews page. Please contact our Book Review editors Mark Deets mark.deets@aucegypt.edu and Ndubueze Mbahndubueze@buffalo.edu for more information.
Manuscripts submitted to the Journal of West African History should be submitted online athttps://ojs.msupress.msu.edu/index.php/JWAH/about/submissions. In order to submit an article, you will have to create an account. The site will guide you through this process.
By:
Madeleine Futter
Monday, Aug 16, 2021
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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Call for submissions: Faith, Religion and Global Higher Education
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The history of higher education in both Western and non-Western cultures finds direct roots in religion—from Buddhist monasteries in ancient India to Islamic madrasas in the Arab region, and to Christian seminaries in Europe and the colonial US. Through a process of secularization of the state apparatuses and their major educational institutions in the post-Industrial Revolution Europe and their colonies, most colleges and universities today are secular. Still, an estimated 2000 religious higher education institutions operate worldwide, and evidence suggests that the numbers are expanding. For example, sub-Saharan Africa has seen the largest growth in private higher education institutions with religious affiliations in recent times (Karram 2011 citing Thayer 2003).
A primary contemporary research interest reflects a recognition and avenues for further exploration that religious beliefs and praxis play significant roles in re-imagining the higher education spheres at individual and institutional levels. In the last few decades, scholars have argued that there is a “return” of religion in higher education (Jacobsen and Jacobsen 2012). Studies suggest that there is a higher level of interest in spirituality among US undergraduate students. Student-led religious organizations and places of worship have increased in college campuses. There has been a “resurgence” of studying religion in American colleges and universities (Hill 2009). In addition, there is an increasing number of proponents for “holistic student development” among student affairs scholars who argue that students’ spiritual growth is equally important (Mayrl and Oeur 2009). Some scholars go as far as naming the current higher education epoch as a “post-secular” campus (Jacobsen and Jacobsen 2012; Sommerville 2006).
While there is a growth in interest among scholars to understand how religion intersects with the academic lives of students, there is also room to explore whether and how religious higher education institutions influence and (re)produce knowledge, what the challenges faced by these institutions are, and how they envision the ways forward—particularly in the post-COVID-19 pandemic reimagination and reformation of the world. Simultaneously, both secular and religious universities and colleges grapple with continuous debates over academic freedom and autonomy, freedom of speech, gender identities, equality issues, radicalization, university governance and finances, and negotiation with state and other broader communities. A further area to explore is higher-level education focused on future religious leaders. Finally, given the interest in religious literacy across a wide spectrum of professions, continuous adult learning focused on related issues is worth exploration.
This Special Issue aims to speak to these current debates and go beyond them, particularly from a global perspective, by featuring empirical research papers, reviews of research studies, theoretical/conceptual discussions, and technical reports. The broad goals of the Special Issue are to explore whether and how religion is an important factor in higher education student affairs, how to (re)conceptualize religion and the ways in which it is negotiated at the institutional levels with other pervasive factors such as globalization, and to highlight interventions as well as innovations in both knowledge (re)production and dissemination—all from an international and comparative education perspective.
Dr. Katherine MarshallDr. Sudipta RoyGuest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
Manuscripts should be submitted online at www.mdpi.com by registering and logging in to this website. Once you are registered, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline. All papers will be peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 100 words) can be sent to the Editorial Office for announcement on this website.
Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a double-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Religions is an international peer-reviewed open access monthly journal published by MDPI.
Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 1200 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.
Click here to learn more!
By:
Elaina Lawrence
Monday, Aug 16, 2021
EDUCATION
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CFP: History in Africa 2022 "New Interdisciplinary Approaches to African History"
History in Africa is seeking contributions that examine interdisciplinarity in African history in new ways. Interdisciplinarity happens across academia on multiple, overlapping levels including the use of methods from other disciplines, team-based collaborations (multidisciplinary), and the creation of new fields (transdisciplinary).
As historians of Africa, we may engage in interdisciplinary work by doing ethnographic research or by maintaining an appointment in a multidisciplinary African Studies program. Meanwhile, at many of our institutions, there are pressures to establish new interdisciplinary majors, often in STEM, but also in the humanities and social sciences. How does this proliferation of interdisciplinary programming relate to us as historians? In particular, the editors are interested in how scholars are rethinking interdisciplinary methods while engaging with source materials. As historians, we have generally taken for granted our capacity to engage in interdisciplinary work, especially by working with anthropology, linguistics, or even archaeology (Zeleza 2007; Brizuela Garcia 2008). Yet, as historians of Africa we also rely on literature, visual arts, and, increasingly, digital media, in our scholarship and teaching. Are there ways in which interdisciplinarity in African history is being redefined by changing methodologies, archival materials, or sources?
This CFP comes as the story of the post-World War II origins of African Studies and the role of scholars in a changing world faces new scrutiny. It is compelling that African Studies did not emerge on the scene in the 1950s as the story has often been told. Instead, African Studies began in the aftermath of the US Civil War as Black intellectuals and activists developed an interdisciplinary and pan-African outlook to their work that originally flourished at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. (James Pritchett, "Reflections on the State of African Studies," Presidential Lecture, ASA 2014, Indianapolis, IN) The theme of the 63rd ASA meeting that we just shared virtually called on us to recognize and confront these legacies of division and exclusion in African Studies. We must also respond to the range of twenty-first century movements calling for social justice on the African continent and in the Global North (Ampofo 2016). How do interdisciplinary frameworks provide different creative spaces to address these calls to action that also shape our work as historians of Africa?
We invite contributions that address interdisciplinarity in African history in relation to methods, source analysis, and historiographical debates.
As always, submissions that fall outside of the scope of this special section theme of interdisciplinary approaches are welcome.
We also invite submissions for other features in our journal including Archival Reports,“Interview with an Archivist,” and “History from Africa” on a rolling basis. Please address any questions to the Managing Editor.
Possible topics related to our interdisciplinary theme include:
Theorizing interdisciplinary methods
Promise and challenge of collaboration
Interdisciplinary methods and public histories
Redefining the discipline
Linking Africa and its diasporas
Interdisciplinarity and the digital humanities
Racial justice and interdisciplinarity
Centering Africa in interdisciplinary approaches
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
Please email a 500-word abstract to managingeditor@historyinafrica.org by February 15, 2021 with the subject line: HiA Abstract Submission 2022. By late February, authors will be notified whether to submit a full article for peer review by June 1, 2021. Please note that invitations to submit articles for peer review do not guarantee publication.
Articles selected for publication after peer review will be included in the 2022 volume of History in Africa. Articles may appear in advance of the publication date via FirstView once the copy editing process is completed. Any queries should be addressed to Lorelle Semley at managingeditor@historyinafrica.org.
Works Cited
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza, “Introduction: The Disciplining of Africa,” in Zeleza, ed., The Study of Africa: Disciplinary and Interdisciplinary Encounters, vol. 1 (CODESRIA: Dakar, 2007), 1-35.
Esperanza Brizuela-Garcia, “Towards a critical interdisciplinarity? African history and the reconstruction of universal narratives,” Rethinking History Vol. 12, No. 3, September 2008: 299–316.
James Pritchett, “Reflections on the State of African Studies,” Presidential Lecture, ASA 2014, Indianapolis, IN, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYxbYLgx32M
Akosua Adomako Ampofo, “Re-Viewing Studies on Africa, #Black Lives Matter, and Envisioning the Future of African Studies,” African Studies Review, Vol. 59, No. 2 (September 2016): 7–29.
By:
Elaina Lawrence
Monday, Aug 16, 2021
EDUCATION
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Webinar: Retrieving Women's Voices in African Political History 12/01/2020
Since the 1970s, scholars have raised awareness about the gender biases of archival sources, especially when it comes to colonial, postcolonial, national or diplomatic archives. They have shown that women’s invisibility did not mean an absence of traces, and advocated innovative methodologies and the search for unusual sources to reconstruct women’s lost voices in African history.
Our guest speakers work on African women's voices in various historical, geographical and more importantly political contexts, and with many different sources (public archives, literature, autobiographies...). They will share their insights on how to retrieve, create or re-interpret sources about women’s power and how to find new conceptual tools to complicate political narratives
Speakers: Anna Adima (Doctoral researcher, University of York), Marciana Nafula Were (Lecturer, Tom Mboya University/Stellenbosch University) & Immanuel Harisch (Doctoral researcher, Department of African Studies, University of Vienna).
The discussion will be informal (short presentation of archives/sources; Q&A). This working group doesn’t mean you have to work: just come join us to listen and/or contribute to a friendly discussion where students, researchers and professors are all welcome!
Registration to access the online meeting here: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/beyond-silences-retrieving-womens-voices-in-african-political-history-tickets-132949793411
By:
Elaina Lawrence
Monday, Aug 16, 2021
EDUCATION
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CFP: Entremons UPF Journal of World History
Entremons UPF Journal of World History invites you to submit
an original text for its possible inclusion in the next issue of their journal.
Entremons is an annual publication sponsored by the University Pompeu Fabra and accepts both academic articles and recently published books' reviews about World History.
The texts that will be considered for publication should be sent to revista.entremons@upf.edu between January 1st and March 1st, 2021.
Articles can be written in English, Spanish, or Catalan, and they must include a summary and keywords both in the original language and in English.
Rules for citations can be found at their website www.entremons.org
By:
Elaina Lawrence
Monday, Aug 16, 2021
EDUCATION
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