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Making, Unmaking, and Remaking Africa!
This is your chance to contribute to vital discussions on Africa's future and showcase your research.Read more and apply here: https://conference.caas-acea.org/
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+1
Making, Unmaking, and Remaking Africa!
This is your chance to contribute to vital discussions on Africa's future and showcase your research.Read more and apply here: https://conference.caas-acea.org/
Read more
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

EDUCATION
EQT Foundation opens global call for scientists developing solutions tackling methane emissions
EQT Foundation announces a new call for proposals, reaffirming its commitment to supporting breakthrough science in underfunded areas. The Breakthrough Science grants program awards €25K – €100K to scientists to accelerate their innovative ideas for solving climate change and health inequities, with this call targeting the topic of methane.
Key Details of the Breakthrough Science Program:
Application Period: September 24, 2024, to November 8, 2024
Grant amounts: €25,000 to €100,000
Eligibility: Researchers globally affiliated with academic or non-profit organizations
Research Focus: Projects aimed at reducing/controlling/capturing/mitigating methane emissions
Decision Timeline: Applicants will receive a decision within 21 days after the application deadline.
For more information, read here: https://eqtfoundation.com/breakthroughscience/
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

EDUCATION
EQT Foundation opens global call for scientists developing solutions tackling methane emissions
EQT Foundation announces a new call for proposals, reaffirming its commitment to supporting breakthrough science in underfunded areas. The Breakthrough Science grants program awards €25K – €100K to scientists to accelerate their innovative ideas for solving climate change and health inequities, with this call targeting the topic of methane.
Key Details of the Breakthrough Science Program:
Application Period: September 24, 2024, to November 8, 2024
Grant amounts: €25,000 to €100,000
Eligibility: Researchers globally affiliated with academic or non-profit organizations
Research Focus: Projects aimed at reducing/controlling/capturing/mitigating methane emissions
Decision Timeline: Applicants will receive a decision within 21 days after the application deadline.
For more information, read here: https://eqtfoundation.com/breakthroughscience/
Read more
By:
Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major

EDUCATION
CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History
Greetings Amy Jamison,New items have been posted matching your subscriptions.
Table of Contents
H-Africa: New posted content
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
H-Net Job Guide Weekly Report for H-Africa: 9 September - 16 September [Announcement]
Call for papers: #afrocyberactivism: knowledge production, self-narrations and decolonial strategies in the digital era in France and Spain (Sept 22-25, 2025, U of Constance) [Announcement]
Africa-Asia 3 CfP, Join us in Dakar! (Only two more weeks to submit) [Announcement]
Media Report: Toyin Falola to Inaugurate New Field Called African Ancestral Studies (AAS)
REMINDER: CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions [Announcement]
H-Africa: New posted content
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
Emily Joan Elliott (she/hers)
In addition to our guest-edited section described below, we always welcome submissions on a rolling basis, with no deadline for consideration. Please do think of us if your research or professional background touches on festive practices!
You can also view this announcement as a PDF.
International borders affect you every day. They play a role in determining whether you are a birthright citizen or an unauthorized migrant. They showcase a nation’s ability or inability to guarantee your wellbeing. They factor into immigration, asylum, and national security debates. Media and political analysts often portray borders as places where pathos, illegality, and poverty thrive innately. Yet, they are also places where ordinary citizens make historical claims, or defend, criticize, and even parody immigration and security policy.
While many of those border enactments are rightly serious or even melancholy in tone, some recurring rituals like border festivals foreground whimsical or celebratory narratives. This issue seeks submissions that critically engage with border festivals—recurring ritual enactments performed at, across, or in close proximity to an international boundary line that foster cross-border communication, create opportunities for practical governance, or occasion the memorialization of shared histories. It also provides a platform for scholarly and creative submissions that critically engage how borders and boundaries can be invoked metaphorically through music, literature, performance art, and/or the built environment.
Situated at the crossroads of de-centering the state and embracing the everyday-ness of borders, geographer Chris Rumford’s appeal to “vernacularize” border studies using concepts such as “borderwork” and “seeing like a border” provides an excellent starting point for this invitation to take the study of festive borders and boundaries seriously. His concept of “borderwork” emphasizes “bottom-up” activity and specifically the everyday meaning-making labor, or the bordering practices, of citizens and non-citizens (Rumford 2006, 2008, and 2013). “Seeing like a border” is premised on the idea that borders should be understood as the business of everyone, not just the business of the state. While considerations of state practices are still (and should remain) vital to the study of border festivals, it is safe to say that dominant, static, top-down approaches are incomplete.
Reflecting on anthropological theories that link festive practices to “expected” moments of life transitions (Van Gennep 1960; Turner 1987), David Picard draws attention to the ways in which festivals can also play a role in mediating unanticipated crises such as “the shock of migration” and “environmental disaster”—two global challenges that shape the contemporary study of borders. Indeed, existing studies of border festivals, traditions, commemorations, and enactments elaborate this point on a much larger scale. Methodologically diverse and ranging from festival traditions in the Senegambia and the trans-Volta (Ghana/Togo) that emphasize the “centrality of the margins” (Nugent 2019), to the meticulously choreographed Wagah ceremony that transpires at the India/Pakistan border (Menon 2013), to cultural performances that delineate the Kashmir conflict (Aggarwal 2004), to the long-standing celebration of George Washington’s Birthday on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border (Peña 2020), to the religiously-inflected and festive revival of historical social groupings between China, Mongolia, and Russia (Billé and Humphrey 2021)—they have underlined how a range of actors make national and ethnic affiliation identity claims public, stage historical memory, recover from natural disasters, and even shape practical governance through stylized acts of crossing and gathering.
Moreover, borders may also be critically invoked in the design and production of “borderless” or “borderlands” celebrations (e.g., No Border Fest, Borderland Music Festival). What stands out across these theorizations (and what makes them the key to study of border festivals) is their inbuilt foundation in performance theory and especially performativity. This special issue invites us to think creatively about the idea that borders are always in the making both at and beyond international boundary lines. In both contexts, they are actualized festively through embodiment and stylized rituals that ffect change in the social world. As the first of its kind, this issue aims to create a generative space for the future study of border festivals. We are looking for a variety of submissions ranging from previously unpublished methodological reflections, artist statements, illustrations, documentaries and interactive media to research reports and evidence-based papers that engage festive border commemorations of any kind.
Some possible themes for exploration include:
conceptualizing borders and boundaries as festive
intangible heritage and cultural memory across borderlands
organization, logistics, and finance
cross-border cooperation and practical governance
global challenges: climate change, mass displacement, public health
participation, reception, conflict, and political efficacy
festive landscapes and built environments
embodiment, choreography, and evolving repertoires
pleasure through collaboration
In line with the interdisciplinary nature of the Journal of Festive Studies, we welcome submissions of original research and analysis rooted in a variety of fields including (but not limited to): social and cultural history, anthropology, archaeology, cultural geography, architecture, technology, musicology, museum studies, literary studies and performance studies. In addition to traditional academic essays, we invite short essays and creative contributions that incorporate digital media such as timelines and maps, photographic essays, digital exhibitions, interactive media, documentaries, illustrations, creative audio, and interviews that engage with festivity.
We invite you to submit an abstract and short bio by January 15, 2025. The submission deadline for completed article manuscripts is August 1, 2025. Please make sure to consult the journal submission guidelines.
If you have any further questions, please contact Elaine A. Peña at penae@wustl.edu.
H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, the publisher of the Journal of Festive Studies, is committed to open access. All H-Net content, including journals, monographs, and reviews, are freely available to both authors and readers. There are no charges to submit or publish in the Journal of Festive Studies.
References
Aggarwal, Ravina. Beyond Lines of Control: Performance and Politics on the Disputed Borders of Ladakh, India. Durham: Duke UP, 2004.
Billé, Franck and Caroline Humphrey. On the Edge: Life Along the Russia-China Border. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2021.
Menon, Jisha. Performance of Nationalism: India, Pakistan, and the Memory of Partition. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2013.
Nugent, Paul. Boundaries, Communities, and State-Making in West Africa: The Centrality of the Margins. Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 2019.
Peña. Elaine A. ¡Viva George! Celebrating Washington’s Birthday at the U.S.-Mexico Border. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2020.
Picard, David. 2016. “The Festive Frame: Festivals as Mediators for Social Change.” Ethnos 81, no. 4 (2015): 600-616.
Rumford, Chris. “Towards a Vernacularized Border Studies: The Case of Citizen Borderwork.” Journal of Borderlands Studies 28, no. 2 (2013): 169-180.
Salter, Mark B. “Places Everyone: Performativity and Border Studies.” Political Geography 30, no. 2 (2011): 66-67.
Turner, Victor. “Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Period in Rites of Passage.” In Betwixt and Between: Patterns of Masculine and Feminine Initiation, edited by Louise Carus Mahdi, Steven Foster & Meredith Little. pp. 5–22. Chicago, IL: Open Court, 1987.
Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Chicago, IL: University Chicago Press, 1960.
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Call for papers: #afrocyberactivism: knowledge production, self-narrations and decolonial strategies in the digital era in France and Spain (Sept 22-25, 2025, U of Constance) [Announcement]
Julia Borst
A continuación encontrará la versión española.
#afrocyberactivismes: production des savoirs, narrations de soi et stratégies décoloniales à l’ère du digital en France et en Espagne
39. Romanistiktag Universität Konstanz | 22.–25. September 2025
Dans cette section, nous nous penchons sur l’émergence du cyberactivisme auprès des collectifs africains et afrodescendants en France et en Espagne. Les deux pays partent de contextes différents, notamment en termes de politique mémorielle par rapport à la colonisation en Afrique d’une part et eu égard à la tradition des mouvements noirs sur le sol européen d’autre part – pensons, p.ex., à la Négritude au début du XXe siècle ou au vif débat autour de l’afropéanité en France. Pour autant, nous assistons, tant en France qu’en Espagne, au boom sans précédent d’une production littéraire et activiste afro au cours des dernières années, dû en partie à une visibilité propice au sein des espaces culturels aussi bien physiques que virtuels, sous la coordination des communautés afrodescendantes et africaines menant de front un activisme à l’intersection, entre autres, de l’antiracisme, du panafricanisme et de l’afroféminisme. De même, consécutivement nous observons l’émergence de nouvelles figures africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes assumant leurs identités transversales, politisant ainsi via la littérature, l’art, le digital, etc., les problématiques qui les traversent. C’est le cas, entres autres, de Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis et Isabelle Boni-Claverie en France et de Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler et Jeffrey Abé Pans en Espagne.
Au-delà des outils traditionnels comme le livre, la presse « classique » ou la télé, les productions qui découlent de l’#afrocyberactivisme puisent aux sources de plusieurs canaux de diffusion parmi lesquels principalement les plateformes numériques, mettant en lumière des épistémologies naguère méconnues. Grâce à l’émergence du « web 2.0 », les consommateur.ices deviennent elleux-aussi des producteur.rices de contenu, participant à la création, production et circulation des savoirs en ligne. En effet, la dimension participative et interactive qu’offre le cybermonde permet aux « groupes minorés » de faire émerger leurs savoirs, discours et modèles culturels grâce à une praxis trop souvent ignorée dans les sphères mainstream. À contre-courant du récit officiel, les différent.e.s acteur.rices proposent des auto-narrations sous des formes aussi bien artistiques, politiques que littéraires. Celles-ci se caractérisent le plus souvent par de mécanismes d’auto-légitimation, notamment la diffusion de grilles de lecture alternatives relevant de façons « autres » de produire de la connaissance et même de faire science à partir d’outils endogènes, affranchis de l’hégémonie de tutelles institutionnelles. On note par conséquent une nouvelle dynamique dans les espaces numériques qui se manifeste par l’émergence exponentielle de blogs/vlogs (p.ex. Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), de magazines en ligne (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), de podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques), de profils et de contenus d’activistes sur différentes plateformes digitales comme YouTube, Facebook, TikTok et Instagram.
L’intérêt scientifique de notre section réside précisément dans l’enjeu épistémique qu’elle soulève : placer les collectifs afroeuropéens au cœur de la réflexion en faisant du cyberespace un cadre d’agentivité. En s’inscrivant dans l’innovation de la recherche académique, nous mettons en lumière les débats autour des nouvelles subjectivités concernant l’afro(euro)péanité, un lieu de négociation qui ravive les tensions à rebours des héritages en vigueur du « passé colonial ». Suivant une perspective décoloniale, la section souhaite accueillir des propositions portant sur des voix « rebelles », dissonantes ou discordantes, en ligne, qui sont symboles d’une résistance, à même de faire émerger des auto-récits afroeuropéens au cœur du cyberactivisme. Nous nous intéresserons notamment à la création de nouvelles stratégies (auto)narratives par lesquelles les acteurs.trices rendent compte de leurs expériences et récits. Par conséquent, la section entend étudier les discours et épistémologies, les subjectivités et corporalités, les routes et réseaux, les imaginaires et esthétiques, les positionnalités et connectivités, etc. qui se manifestent dans les articulations littéraires, artistiques, culturelles, activistes dans l’espace digital et ses intersections avec le monde non-numérique.
Les propositions (en français ou en espagnol) exploreront le phénomène actuel de l’#afrocyberactivisme en France et en Espagne du point de vue épistémique, en discutant des possibilités et des défis de l’espace digital en tant que moyen de décolonisation des savoirs tout en tenant compte des biais algorithmiques. De même, elles se consacreront à de cas concrets –en se focalisant sur un espace culturel ou en adoptant un point de vue comparatif– pour étudier comment ces acteur.rices se racontent elleux-mêmes afin d’explorer leurs stratégies poétiques et esthétiques. Il s’agira de se questionner sur les manières dont les corps racialisés sont racontés, rendus visibles et décolonisés sur les plateformes digitales à travers une « auto-déstéréotypisation » du sujet racialisé. Les participant.e.s analyseront les manières alternatives dont les expériences des personnes africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes sont articulées en marge ou hors des filtres du marché littéraire traditionnel en étudiant les nouveaux espaces culturels digitaux et les récits non hégémoniques qui y circulent, ainsi que les poétiques alternatives et les intertextes afro qui sont utilisés pour traduire les imaginaires des communautés marginalisées par le prisme eurocentrique. Des propositions portant sur des questions similaires en Afrique, dans les Caraïbes et les Amériques francophones et hispanophones ainsi que la circulation transnationale des savoirs sont également les bienvenues.
Sans prétendre à l’exhaustivité, les propositions de communication pourront prendre en compte les axes de réflexion indicatifs suivants :
Cyberactivisme, co-productions, décolonisation et désacadémisation des savoirs
Récits contre-hégémoniques et auto-narrations via les plateformes digitales (entre autres, les retentissements des épistèmes antiracistes, panafricanistes, afroféministes etc.)
Stratégies de résistance, esthétiques subversives et justice épistémique articulées aux textes littéraires, artistiques, culturels, activistes en ligne
Afrocyberidentités : afroespagnolité, afrofrancité, afropéanité et récits de soi
Hashtag viral, emoticones, buzz, corps-politique, collectifs afro et cybermétadiscours dans les régions respectives
Littérarisation de l’espace numérique et nouvelles poétiques et stratégies de narration de soi
Contact : afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
Cette section est organisée dans le cadre du projet ERC Starting Grant “Afroeurope and Cyberspace : Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies – Unravelling the Textures” (AFROEUROPECYBERSPACE, 101110473), PI : Julia Borst.
#afrocyberactivismos: producción de saberes, auto-narraciones y estrategias decoloniales en la era digital en Francia y España
En esta sección, examinaremos la emergencia del ciberactivismo de colectivos africanos y afrodescendientes en Francia y España. Ambos países subyacen contextos diferentes, sobre todo en cuanto a las políticas de memoria en relación con la colonización en África, por un lado, y la tradición de movimientos negros en territorio europeo, por otro – piénsese, por ejemplo, en la Négritude de principios del siglo XX o en el vivo debate sobre la afropeanidad en Francia. Sin embargo, tanto en Francia como en España, en los últimos años hemos presenciado un auge sin precedentes de la producción literaria y activista afro, en parte debido a una visibilidad favorable en espacios culturales tanto físicos como virtuales, bajo la coordinación de comunidades afrodescendientes y africanas comprometidas con un activismo en la intersección del antirracismo, panafricanismo y afrofeminismo, entre otros. También estamos asistiendo la aparición de nuevas figuras africanas, afrodescendientes y afroeuropeas, que abrazan sus identidades transversales, politizando las cuestiones que les afectan a través de la literatura, el arte, los medios digitales, etc. Entre ellas se encuentran Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis e Isabelle Boni-Claverie en Francia y Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler y Jeffrey Abé Pans en España.
Además de los canales mediales tradicionales como libros, la prensa ‘clásica’ y la televisión, las producciones resultantes del #afrociberactivismo se inspiran en fuentes de varios canales de distribución, entre los que destacan las plataformas digitales, sacando a la luz epistemologías hasta ahora poco conocidas. Gracias a la aparición de la ‘web 2.0’, lxs consumidorxs también se han convertido en productorxs de contenido, participando en la creación, producción y circulación de saberes en línea. De hecho, la dimensión participativa e interactiva que ofrece el cibermundo permite a los ‘grupos minorizados’ sacar a la luz sus conocimientos, discursos y modelos culturales mediante una praxis que con demasiada frecuencia se ignora en las esferas del mainstream. A contracorriente de la narrativa oficial, lxs diferentes actorxs proponen auto-narrativas artísticas, políticas e incluso literarias. Se plasman en forma de mecanismos de autolegitimación, en particular, la difusión de miradas alternativas, basadas en ‘otras’ formas de producir conocimiento e incluso de hacer ciencia con herramientas endógenas, liberadas de la hegemonía de los guardianes institucionales. Como resultado, vivimos una nueva dinámica en los espacios digitales con la aparición exponencial de blogs/vlogs (por ejemplo, Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), revistas en línea (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques) y perfiles y contenidos activistas en diversas plataformas digitales como YouTube, Facebook, TikTok e Instagram.
El interés científico de nuestra sección reside precisamente en la cuestión epistémica que plantea situar a los colectivos afroeuropeos en el centro de la reflexión, haciendo del ciberespacio un marco de agencia. Inscribiéndonos en la innovación de la investigación académica, destacamos los debates en torno a las nuevas subjetividades relativas a la afro(euro)peanidad, un lugar de negociación que reaviva las tensiones frente a los legados imperantes del ‘pasado colonial’. Desde una perspectiva decolonial, la sección desea acoger propuestas que aborden las voces ‘rebeldes’ en línea, disonantes o discordantes, que son símbolos de resistencia y capaces de hacer emerger autonarrativas afroeuropeas en el seno del ciberactivismo. En particular, nos interesa la creación de nuevas estrategias (auto)narrativas a través de las cuales lxs actorxs dan cuenta de sus experiencias y narrativas. En consecuencia, la sección pretende estudiar los discursos y epistemologías, subjetividades y corporalidades, rutas y redes, imaginarios y estéticas, posicionalidades y conectividades, etc., que se manifiestan en las articulaciones literarias, artísticas, culturales y activistas en el espacio digital y sus intersecciones con el mundo no digital.
Las ponencias (en francés o en español) explorarán el fenómeno actual del #afrociberactivismo en Francia y España desde un punto de vista epistémico, discutiendo las posibilidades y desafíos del espacio digital como medio para descolonizar el conocimiento, teniendo en cuenta los sesgos algorítmicos. También se analizarán casos concretos –centrándose en un espacio cultural o adoptando una perspectiva comparativa– para estudiar cómo estxs actorxs se narran a si mismxs con el fin de explorar sus estrategias poéticas y estéticas. El objetivo será examinar las formas en que los cuerpos racializados son narrados, visibilizados y descolonizados en las plataformas digitales a través de una ‘auto-destereotipación’ del sujeto racializado. Lxs participantes explorarán los modos alternativos en los que las experiencias de personas africanas, afrodescendientes y afroeuropeas se articulan en los márgenes o fuera de los filtros del mercado literario tradicional, estudiando los nuevos espacios culturales digitales y las narrativas no hegemónicas que circulan en ellos, así como las poéticas alternativas y los intertextos afro que se utilizan para traducir los imaginarios de las comunidades marginadas por el prisma eurocéntrico. También son bienvenidas las propuestas que aborden cuestiones similares en África, el Caribe y las Américas francófonos e hispanohablantes, así como la circulación transnacional del conocimiento.
Sin pretender ser exhaustivas, las propuestas de ponencias pueden tener en cuenta las siguientes líneas indicativas:
Ciberactivismo, coproducciones, descolonización y desacademización del conocimiento
Narrativas contrahegemónicas y autonarrativas a través de plataformas digitales (entre otros, el impacto de epistemes antirracistas, panafricanistas, afrofeministas, etc.)
Estrategias de resistencia, estética subversiva y justicia epistémica articuladas en textos literarios, artísticos, culturales y activistas en línea
Afrociberidentidades: afroespañolidad, afrofrancidad, afropeanidad y auto-narrativas
Hashtags virales, emoticones, buzz, política del cuerpo, colectivos afro y cibermetadiscurso en las respectivas regiones
Literarización del espacio digital y nuevas poéticas y estrategias de autonarración
Contacto: afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
Está sección está organizada como parte del proyecto ERC Starting Grant “Afroeurope and Cyberspace : Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies – Unravelling the Textures” (AFROEUROPECYBERSPACE, 101110473), PI : Julia Borst.
Contact Information
Organizers:
Odome Angone (U Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar)
Julia Borst (U Bremen)
Merveilles Mouloungui (U Bremen)
Contact Email
afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
URL
https://www.romanistiktag.de/xxxix-romanistiktag/sektionen/sektion-2/
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Africa-Asia 3 CfP, Join us in Dakar! (Only two more weeks to submit) [Announcement]
M.C. van den Haak
Announcement Type
Call for Papers
Location
Senegal
ConFest dates: 11 - 14 June 2025Location: Dakar, SenegalWebsites: English, Français, PortugaisSubmission deadline proposals: 1 October 2024 (only two weeks left!)Building on the multiple encounters, interactions and dialogues initiated at the first Africa-Asia conference (Accra, Ghana, 2015) and the second Africa-Asia Conference (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2018), this third edition of the ‘Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge’ event seeks to deepen the explorations of new realities and long histories connecting Africa and Asia.The collaborative mission of Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD, Dakar, Senegal), Collective Africa-Southeast Asia Platform (CASAP, Bangkok, Thailand) and the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS, Leiden, The Netherlands) aims to stimulate inquiry into the rich resources offered by the city of Dakar and its surroundings. In this way, the city itself enables the materialisation of an experiential Conference-Festival (ConFest) that celebrates diversity within academia, but that also extends beyond academia into civil society and the arts.Take this opportunity to engage with other participants thinking both comparatively and holistically about the challenges and possibilities of cross-continental and trans-regional encounters!The proposal deadline (1 October) for Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge 3 (Africa-Asia 3) is fast approaching. Don’t miss the chance to participate in this exciting event!
Discover the Africa-Asia 3 ClustersThe ConFest aims to facilitate transdisciplinary conversations among participants. There are 12 thematic clusters that correspond to academic trends within the global context. These clusters are meant to be general starting points for your intervention. Explore the 12 Africa-Asia 3 clusters now!
Diverse FormatsThe Africa-Asia 3 ConFest clusters can be explored through various formats, including papers, panels, roundtables, posters, as well as audio-visual and other media. We also welcome suggestions for activities and workshops that will enrich the exchange of knowledge and experiences.
Submit your ProposalsWith less than two weeks left (deadline 1 October), now is the time to submit your proposal! We are inviting proposals in English, French and Portuguese. The full Call for Proposals can be found here: https://www.iias.asia/event/africa-asia-new-axis-knowledge-third-edition
Africa-Asia Book, Craft and Food Fair Publishers and institutes are invited to exhibit at the Book, Craft and Food Fair at Africa-Asia 3 ConFest to present their work to the large number of attendees. Should you be interested in exhibiting at Africa-Asia ConFest 3, please email us: AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Information
For queries about Africa-Asia Confest 3, please visit our website or contact us at AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Email
AfricaAsia@iias.nl
URL
REMINDER: CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions [Announcement]
Christoph Gümmer
CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History
Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions
Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden, 10−12 September 2025
Keynote Speakers
Laura de Mello e Souza
Fe Navarrete Linares
Call for Panels and Papers
Since its foundation in 2002, the European Network in Universal and Global History (ENIUGH) has emerged as the leading international association for research and teaching in world and global history. Following seven successful congresses in Leipzig, Dresden, London, Paris, Budapest, Turku, and The Hague, the next ENIUGH congress will be held at Linnaeus University in Växjö, Sweden. The congress will be on site only, although panel chairs may in exceptional cases allow participants to present their papers remotely.
Under the overall theme of “Critical Global Histories” we aim to further discussion, self-reflection, and the exploration of new avenues in global history. Over the past decade, global history has expanded internally (quantitatively and thematically, as well as methodologically and theoretically) and has, in doing so, influenced many other fields of research in the humanities and social sciences. At the same time, the expansion has led to debate and criticism, not least within the field. Objections have been raised against global history’s alleged macro-historical emphasis, connectivity bias, Eurocentrism, Anglophone dominance, and lack of attention to gender perspectives and Indigenous methodologies. Global history has also been accused of being imbued with neo-imperial, teleological, globalizing, exoticizing and neoliberal leanings. In recent years, decoloniality as a research practice and method has raised further questions regarding the situatedness of knowledge and the role of local sources for global history. At the same time, a current nationalist backlash in many countries has led to calls for a return to national history, thereby challenging the fundamental premises of global history.
At the Eighth ENIUGH Congress, we aim to pick up on these discussions and take a step forward by opening a space of dialogue, both between global historians and between global historians and their colleagues in other disciplines who are involved in the study of the global human pasts or who work with transnational, transregional, transcultural approaches in their respective fields. The Eighth ENIUGH-Congress will be a meeting place for scholars from all of the fields that go beyond methodological nationalism and Eurocentrism. We believe that critical thinking – both in the sense of impartial and intellectually disciplined thinking and in the sense of an augmented awareness of the many pitfalls associated with global history – can provide some of the means by which the field can evolve and retain its intellectual vigor and contemporary relevance. By framing the theme in terms of “global histories” in the plural, we aim to promote the inclusion of a broad range of voices, perspectives and orientations within the field, while forcefully rejecting the possibility of insisting on a single, dominating story or grand narrative of global history. The overall theme of the congress will be explored in a series of keynote events, roundtables, and panel discussions and in several of the regular panels and presentations at the congress.
Aside from the events related to the overall theme of the congress, we expect the congress to reflect the entire span of current research in global history, and we look forward to welcoming to Växjö scholars from all over world working on global and world history and related fields of study. Proposals can include a wide range of topics related to global, entangled, and transnational historical processes and phenomena, with no geographic or chronological limitations. While we expect most of the congress delegates to be historians, we also welcome scholars from other disciplines engaged in the study of humanity’s global pasts.
We invite contributions consisting of presentations of original research and empirically grounded work in progress, as well as theoretical, methodological, ethical, and historiographical reflections. We particularly encourage contributions that reflect on how critical thinking can be applied in global historical investigations. Although the main language of the congress will be English, individual presentations and panels in other languages can be accommodated (see further below).
In particular, we welcome contributions (both panels and individual papers) tailored to one of the following themes:
Temporalities and periodizations in global history
Ethical aspects of doing global history
Expanding the global archive
Multivocality in global history
Global history and decoloniality
Transdisciplinary approaches
Indigenous perspectives and methodologies
Challenging modernity from the perspective of global history
National history, nationalist backlash, and identity politics
Global environmental history
Nordic colonialism
In addition to the main conference themes, we also invite proposals dealing with relations, transfers and entanglements between states, peoples, communities and individuals located in or spanning different parts and regions of the world.
Proposals
We invite proposals for panels, double panels, roundtables, and individual papers. Papers and presentations may be in any language, but abstracts for all panels, roundtables, and papers must be provided in English. Panel chairs must ensure the openness, accessibility, and coherence of their panel, and it is recommended that Q&A sessions be held in English regardless of the language of the presentations. All congress delegates are expected to participate on site in Växjö. In exceptional circumstances, panel chairs may allow a minority of presentations to be held remotely.
Panels may comprise up to four presentations, and double panels may comprise up to eight presentations, in addition to commentators and chairs. Panels must consist of scholars representing at least two different institutions in at least two different countries. Double panels must include participants from at least three different institutions in at least three different countries.
Roundtables may include up to five participants, in addition to commentators and chairs. Like double panels, roundtables must include scholars from at least three different institutions in at least three different countries.
We also welcome proposals for individual papers, which, if accepted, will be assigned to a panel by the steering committee of ENIUGH. Papers that speak to one or several of the themes listed above are particularly welcome, and the theme of most relevance to the proposal should be indicated in the submission form.
Submissions
All abstracts for panels and papers must be submitted by October 15 2024 via the registration tool on our website. Please note that all speakers of a panel must submit their papers individually in addition to the collective panel submission.
Abstracts for panels should be 250 – 300 words long and should indicate all panelists, their institutional affiliations as well as their paper titles. Additionally, panel abstracts should be pertaining to one of the conference themes.
Abstracts for papers should be 200 – 250 words long and indicate whether the paper is submitted as an individual paper or as part of a panel. In the latter case the abstract should name the panel title as well as the convenor’s name.
All abstracts should be in English. If the presentation is in a language other than English, please state this in the abstract. (Papers are selected solely on the basis of content, not linguistic criteria.)
Abstracts should also indicate whether you plan to participate in person or online. Please note that the convenor and a majority of participants in each panel must participate on site.
Selected panels and papers will be notified in December 2024.
Contact Information
Panel/Paper Submission and Registration: https://research.uni-leipzig.de/~eniugh/congress/registration-tool/
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Jayden Hewitt
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CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History
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Table of Contents
H-Africa: New posted content
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
H-Net Job Guide Weekly Report for H-Africa: 9 September - 16 September [Announcement]
Call for papers: #afrocyberactivism: knowledge production, self-narrations and decolonial strategies in the digital era in France and Spain (Sept 22-25, 2025, U of Constance) [Announcement]
Africa-Asia 3 CfP, Join us in Dakar! (Only two more weeks to submit) [Announcement]
Media Report: Toyin Falola to Inaugurate New Field Called African Ancestral Studies (AAS)
REMINDER: CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions [Announcement]
H-Africa: New posted content
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
Emily Joan Elliott (she/hers)
In addition to our guest-edited section described below, we always welcome submissions on a rolling basis, with no deadline for consideration. Please do think of us if your research or professional background touches on festive practices!
You can also view this announcement as a PDF.
International borders affect you every day. They play a role in determining whether you are a birthright citizen or an unauthorized migrant. They showcase a nation’s ability or inability to guarantee your wellbeing. They factor into immigration, asylum, and national security debates. Media and political analysts often portray borders as places where pathos, illegality, and poverty thrive innately. Yet, they are also places where ordinary citizens make historical claims, or defend, criticize, and even parody immigration and security policy.
While many of those border enactments are rightly serious or even melancholy in tone, some recurring rituals like border festivals foreground whimsical or celebratory narratives. This issue seeks submissions that critically engage with border festivals—recurring ritual enactments performed at, across, or in close proximity to an international boundary line that foster cross-border communication, create opportunities for practical governance, or occasion the memorialization of shared histories. It also provides a platform for scholarly and creative submissions that critically engage how borders and boundaries can be invoked metaphorically through music, literature, performance art, and/or the built environment.
Situated at the crossroads of de-centering the state and embracing the everyday-ness of borders, geographer Chris Rumford’s appeal to “vernacularize” border studies using concepts such as “borderwork” and “seeing like a border” provides an excellent starting point for this invitation to take the study of festive borders and boundaries seriously. His concept of “borderwork” emphasizes “bottom-up” activity and specifically the everyday meaning-making labor, or the bordering practices, of citizens and non-citizens (Rumford 2006, 2008, and 2013). “Seeing like a border” is premised on the idea that borders should be understood as the business of everyone, not just the business of the state. While considerations of state practices are still (and should remain) vital to the study of border festivals, it is safe to say that dominant, static, top-down approaches are incomplete.
Reflecting on anthropological theories that link festive practices to “expected” moments of life transitions (Van Gennep 1960; Turner 1987), David Picard draws attention to the ways in which festivals can also play a role in mediating unanticipated crises such as “the shock of migration” and “environmental disaster”—two global challenges that shape the contemporary study of borders. Indeed, existing studies of border festivals, traditions, commemorations, and enactments elaborate this point on a much larger scale. Methodologically diverse and ranging from festival traditions in the Senegambia and the trans-Volta (Ghana/Togo) that emphasize the “centrality of the margins” (Nugent 2019), to the meticulously choreographed Wagah ceremony that transpires at the India/Pakistan border (Menon 2013), to cultural performances that delineate the Kashmir conflict (Aggarwal 2004), to the long-standing celebration of George Washington’s Birthday on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border (Peña 2020), to the religiously-inflected and festive revival of historical social groupings between China, Mongolia, and Russia (Billé and Humphrey 2021)—they have underlined how a range of actors make national and ethnic affiliation identity claims public, stage historical memory, recover from natural disasters, and even shape practical governance through stylized acts of crossing and gathering.
Moreover, borders may also be critically invoked in the design and production of “borderless” or “borderlands” celebrations (e.g., No Border Fest, Borderland Music Festival). What stands out across these theorizations (and what makes them the key to study of border festivals) is their inbuilt foundation in performance theory and especially performativity. This special issue invites us to think creatively about the idea that borders are always in the making both at and beyond international boundary lines. In both contexts, they are actualized festively through embodiment and stylized rituals that ffect change in the social world. As the first of its kind, this issue aims to create a generative space for the future study of border festivals. We are looking for a variety of submissions ranging from previously unpublished methodological reflections, artist statements, illustrations, documentaries and interactive media to research reports and evidence-based papers that engage festive border commemorations of any kind.
Some possible themes for exploration include:
conceptualizing borders and boundaries as festive
intangible heritage and cultural memory across borderlands
organization, logistics, and finance
cross-border cooperation and practical governance
global challenges: climate change, mass displacement, public health
participation, reception, conflict, and political efficacy
festive landscapes and built environments
embodiment, choreography, and evolving repertoires
pleasure through collaboration
In line with the interdisciplinary nature of the Journal of Festive Studies, we welcome submissions of original research and analysis rooted in a variety of fields including (but not limited to): social and cultural history, anthropology, archaeology, cultural geography, architecture, technology, musicology, museum studies, literary studies and performance studies. In addition to traditional academic essays, we invite short essays and creative contributions that incorporate digital media such as timelines and maps, photographic essays, digital exhibitions, interactive media, documentaries, illustrations, creative audio, and interviews that engage with festivity.
We invite you to submit an abstract and short bio by January 15, 2025. The submission deadline for completed article manuscripts is August 1, 2025. Please make sure to consult the journal submission guidelines.
If you have any further questions, please contact Elaine A. Peña at penae@wustl.edu.
H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, the publisher of the Journal of Festive Studies, is committed to open access. All H-Net content, including journals, monographs, and reviews, are freely available to both authors and readers. There are no charges to submit or publish in the Journal of Festive Studies.
References
Aggarwal, Ravina. Beyond Lines of Control: Performance and Politics on the Disputed Borders of Ladakh, India. Durham: Duke UP, 2004.
Billé, Franck and Caroline Humphrey. On the Edge: Life Along the Russia-China Border. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2021.
Menon, Jisha. Performance of Nationalism: India, Pakistan, and the Memory of Partition. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2013.
Nugent, Paul. Boundaries, Communities, and State-Making in West Africa: The Centrality of the Margins. Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 2019.
Peña. Elaine A. ¡Viva George! Celebrating Washington’s Birthday at the U.S.-Mexico Border. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2020.
Picard, David. 2016. “The Festive Frame: Festivals as Mediators for Social Change.” Ethnos 81, no. 4 (2015): 600-616.
Rumford, Chris. “Towards a Vernacularized Border Studies: The Case of Citizen Borderwork.” Journal of Borderlands Studies 28, no. 2 (2013): 169-180.
Salter, Mark B. “Places Everyone: Performativity and Border Studies.” Political Geography 30, no. 2 (2011): 66-67.
Turner, Victor. “Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Period in Rites of Passage.” In Betwixt and Between: Patterns of Masculine and Feminine Initiation, edited by Louise Carus Mahdi, Steven Foster & Meredith Little. pp. 5–22. Chicago, IL: Open Court, 1987.
Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Chicago, IL: University Chicago Press, 1960.
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Call for papers: #afrocyberactivism: knowledge production, self-narrations and decolonial strategies in the digital era in France and Spain (Sept 22-25, 2025, U of Constance) [Announcement]
Julia Borst
A continuación encontrará la versión española.
#afrocyberactivismes: production des savoirs, narrations de soi et stratégies décoloniales à l’ère du digital en France et en Espagne
39. Romanistiktag Universität Konstanz | 22.–25. September 2025
Dans cette section, nous nous penchons sur l’émergence du cyberactivisme auprès des collectifs africains et afrodescendants en France et en Espagne. Les deux pays partent de contextes différents, notamment en termes de politique mémorielle par rapport à la colonisation en Afrique d’une part et eu égard à la tradition des mouvements noirs sur le sol européen d’autre part – pensons, p.ex., à la Négritude au début du XXe siècle ou au vif débat autour de l’afropéanité en France. Pour autant, nous assistons, tant en France qu’en Espagne, au boom sans précédent d’une production littéraire et activiste afro au cours des dernières années, dû en partie à une visibilité propice au sein des espaces culturels aussi bien physiques que virtuels, sous la coordination des communautés afrodescendantes et africaines menant de front un activisme à l’intersection, entre autres, de l’antiracisme, du panafricanisme et de l’afroféminisme. De même, consécutivement nous observons l’émergence de nouvelles figures africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes assumant leurs identités transversales, politisant ainsi via la littérature, l’art, le digital, etc., les problématiques qui les traversent. C’est le cas, entres autres, de Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis et Isabelle Boni-Claverie en France et de Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler et Jeffrey Abé Pans en Espagne.
Au-delà des outils traditionnels comme le livre, la presse « classique » ou la télé, les productions qui découlent de l’#afrocyberactivisme puisent aux sources de plusieurs canaux de diffusion parmi lesquels principalement les plateformes numériques, mettant en lumière des épistémologies naguère méconnues. Grâce à l’émergence du « web 2.0 », les consommateur.ices deviennent elleux-aussi des producteur.rices de contenu, participant à la création, production et circulation des savoirs en ligne. En effet, la dimension participative et interactive qu’offre le cybermonde permet aux « groupes minorés » de faire émerger leurs savoirs, discours et modèles culturels grâce à une praxis trop souvent ignorée dans les sphères mainstream. À contre-courant du récit officiel, les différent.e.s acteur.rices proposent des auto-narrations sous des formes aussi bien artistiques, politiques que littéraires. Celles-ci se caractérisent le plus souvent par de mécanismes d’auto-légitimation, notamment la diffusion de grilles de lecture alternatives relevant de façons « autres » de produire de la connaissance et même de faire science à partir d’outils endogènes, affranchis de l’hégémonie de tutelles institutionnelles. On note par conséquent une nouvelle dynamique dans les espaces numériques qui se manifeste par l’émergence exponentielle de blogs/vlogs (p.ex. Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), de magazines en ligne (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), de podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques), de profils et de contenus d’activistes sur différentes plateformes digitales comme YouTube, Facebook, TikTok et Instagram.
L’intérêt scientifique de notre section réside précisément dans l’enjeu épistémique qu’elle soulève : placer les collectifs afroeuropéens au cœur de la réflexion en faisant du cyberespace un cadre d’agentivité. En s’inscrivant dans l’innovation de la recherche académique, nous mettons en lumière les débats autour des nouvelles subjectivités concernant l’afro(euro)péanité, un lieu de négociation qui ravive les tensions à rebours des héritages en vigueur du « passé colonial ». Suivant une perspective décoloniale, la section souhaite accueillir des propositions portant sur des voix « rebelles », dissonantes ou discordantes, en ligne, qui sont symboles d’une résistance, à même de faire émerger des auto-récits afroeuropéens au cœur du cyberactivisme. Nous nous intéresserons notamment à la création de nouvelles stratégies (auto)narratives par lesquelles les acteurs.trices rendent compte de leurs expériences et récits. Par conséquent, la section entend étudier les discours et épistémologies, les subjectivités et corporalités, les routes et réseaux, les imaginaires et esthétiques, les positionnalités et connectivités, etc. qui se manifestent dans les articulations littéraires, artistiques, culturelles, activistes dans l’espace digital et ses intersections avec le monde non-numérique.
Les propositions (en français ou en espagnol) exploreront le phénomène actuel de l’#afrocyberactivisme en France et en Espagne du point de vue épistémique, en discutant des possibilités et des défis de l’espace digital en tant que moyen de décolonisation des savoirs tout en tenant compte des biais algorithmiques. De même, elles se consacreront à de cas concrets –en se focalisant sur un espace culturel ou en adoptant un point de vue comparatif– pour étudier comment ces acteur.rices se racontent elleux-mêmes afin d’explorer leurs stratégies poétiques et esthétiques. Il s’agira de se questionner sur les manières dont les corps racialisés sont racontés, rendus visibles et décolonisés sur les plateformes digitales à travers une « auto-déstéréotypisation » du sujet racialisé. Les participant.e.s analyseront les manières alternatives dont les expériences des personnes africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes sont articulées en marge ou hors des filtres du marché littéraire traditionnel en étudiant les nouveaux espaces culturels digitaux et les récits non hégémoniques qui y circulent, ainsi que les poétiques alternatives et les intertextes afro qui sont utilisés pour traduire les imaginaires des communautés marginalisées par le prisme eurocentrique. Des propositions portant sur des questions similaires en Afrique, dans les Caraïbes et les Amériques francophones et hispanophones ainsi que la circulation transnationale des savoirs sont également les bienvenues.
Sans prétendre à l’exhaustivité, les propositions de communication pourront prendre en compte les axes de réflexion indicatifs suivants :
Cyberactivisme, co-productions, décolonisation et désacadémisation des savoirs
Récits contre-hégémoniques et auto-narrations via les plateformes digitales (entre autres, les retentissements des épistèmes antiracistes, panafricanistes, afroféministes etc.)
Stratégies de résistance, esthétiques subversives et justice épistémique articulées aux textes littéraires, artistiques, culturels, activistes en ligne
Afrocyberidentités : afroespagnolité, afrofrancité, afropéanité et récits de soi
Hashtag viral, emoticones, buzz, corps-politique, collectifs afro et cybermétadiscours dans les régions respectives
Littérarisation de l’espace numérique et nouvelles poétiques et stratégies de narration de soi
Contact : afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
Cette section est organisée dans le cadre du projet ERC Starting Grant “Afroeurope and Cyberspace : Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies – Unravelling the Textures” (AFROEUROPECYBERSPACE, 101110473), PI : Julia Borst.
#afrocyberactivismos: producción de saberes, auto-narraciones y estrategias decoloniales en la era digital en Francia y España
En esta sección, examinaremos la emergencia del ciberactivismo de colectivos africanos y afrodescendientes en Francia y España. Ambos países subyacen contextos diferentes, sobre todo en cuanto a las políticas de memoria en relación con la colonización en África, por un lado, y la tradición de movimientos negros en territorio europeo, por otro – piénsese, por ejemplo, en la Négritude de principios del siglo XX o en el vivo debate sobre la afropeanidad en Francia. Sin embargo, tanto en Francia como en España, en los últimos años hemos presenciado un auge sin precedentes de la producción literaria y activista afro, en parte debido a una visibilidad favorable en espacios culturales tanto físicos como virtuales, bajo la coordinación de comunidades afrodescendientes y africanas comprometidas con un activismo en la intersección del antirracismo, panafricanismo y afrofeminismo, entre otros. También estamos asistiendo la aparición de nuevas figuras africanas, afrodescendientes y afroeuropeas, que abrazan sus identidades transversales, politizando las cuestiones que les afectan a través de la literatura, el arte, los medios digitales, etc. Entre ellas se encuentran Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis e Isabelle Boni-Claverie en Francia y Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler y Jeffrey Abé Pans en España.
Además de los canales mediales tradicionales como libros, la prensa ‘clásica’ y la televisión, las producciones resultantes del #afrociberactivismo se inspiran en fuentes de varios canales de distribución, entre los que destacan las plataformas digitales, sacando a la luz epistemologías hasta ahora poco conocidas. Gracias a la aparición de la ‘web 2.0’, lxs consumidorxs también se han convertido en productorxs de contenido, participando en la creación, producción y circulación de saberes en línea. De hecho, la dimensión participativa e interactiva que ofrece el cibermundo permite a los ‘grupos minorizados’ sacar a la luz sus conocimientos, discursos y modelos culturales mediante una praxis que con demasiada frecuencia se ignora en las esferas del mainstream. A contracorriente de la narrativa oficial, lxs diferentes actorxs proponen auto-narrativas artísticas, políticas e incluso literarias. Se plasman en forma de mecanismos de autolegitimación, en particular, la difusión de miradas alternativas, basadas en ‘otras’ formas de producir conocimiento e incluso de hacer ciencia con herramientas endógenas, liberadas de la hegemonía de los guardianes institucionales. Como resultado, vivimos una nueva dinámica en los espacios digitales con la aparición exponencial de blogs/vlogs (por ejemplo, Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), revistas en línea (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques) y perfiles y contenidos activistas en diversas plataformas digitales como YouTube, Facebook, TikTok e Instagram.
El interés científico de nuestra sección reside precisamente en la cuestión epistémica que plantea situar a los colectivos afroeuropeos en el centro de la reflexión, haciendo del ciberespacio un marco de agencia. Inscribiéndonos en la innovación de la investigación académica, destacamos los debates en torno a las nuevas subjetividades relativas a la afro(euro)peanidad, un lugar de negociación que reaviva las tensiones frente a los legados imperantes del ‘pasado colonial’. Desde una perspectiva decolonial, la sección desea acoger propuestas que aborden las voces ‘rebeldes’ en línea, disonantes o discordantes, que son símbolos de resistencia y capaces de hacer emerger autonarrativas afroeuropeas en el seno del ciberactivismo. En particular, nos interesa la creación de nuevas estrategias (auto)narrativas a través de las cuales lxs actorxs dan cuenta de sus experiencias y narrativas. En consecuencia, la sección pretende estudiar los discursos y epistemologías, subjetividades y corporalidades, rutas y redes, imaginarios y estéticas, posicionalidades y conectividades, etc., que se manifiestan en las articulaciones literarias, artísticas, culturales y activistas en el espacio digital y sus intersecciones con el mundo no digital.
Las ponencias (en francés o en español) explorarán el fenómeno actual del #afrociberactivismo en Francia y España desde un punto de vista epistémico, discutiendo las posibilidades y desafíos del espacio digital como medio para descolonizar el conocimiento, teniendo en cuenta los sesgos algorítmicos. También se analizarán casos concretos –centrándose en un espacio cultural o adoptando una perspectiva comparativa– para estudiar cómo estxs actorxs se narran a si mismxs con el fin de explorar sus estrategias poéticas y estéticas. El objetivo será examinar las formas en que los cuerpos racializados son narrados, visibilizados y descolonizados en las plataformas digitales a través de una ‘auto-destereotipación’ del sujeto racializado. Lxs participantes explorarán los modos alternativos en los que las experiencias de personas africanas, afrodescendientes y afroeuropeas se articulan en los márgenes o fuera de los filtros del mercado literario tradicional, estudiando los nuevos espacios culturales digitales y las narrativas no hegemónicas que circulan en ellos, así como las poéticas alternativas y los intertextos afro que se utilizan para traducir los imaginarios de las comunidades marginadas por el prisma eurocéntrico. También son bienvenidas las propuestas que aborden cuestiones similares en África, el Caribe y las Américas francófonos e hispanohablantes, así como la circulación transnacional del conocimiento.
Sin pretender ser exhaustivas, las propuestas de ponencias pueden tener en cuenta las siguientes líneas indicativas:
Ciberactivismo, coproducciones, descolonización y desacademización del conocimiento
Narrativas contrahegemónicas y autonarrativas a través de plataformas digitales (entre otros, el impacto de epistemes antirracistas, panafricanistas, afrofeministas, etc.)
Estrategias de resistencia, estética subversiva y justicia epistémica articuladas en textos literarios, artísticos, culturales y activistas en línea
Afrociberidentidades: afroespañolidad, afrofrancidad, afropeanidad y auto-narrativas
Hashtags virales, emoticones, buzz, política del cuerpo, colectivos afro y cibermetadiscurso en las respectivas regiones
Literarización del espacio digital y nuevas poéticas y estrategias de autonarración
Contacto: afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
Está sección está organizada como parte del proyecto ERC Starting Grant “Afroeurope and Cyberspace : Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies – Unravelling the Textures” (AFROEUROPECYBERSPACE, 101110473), PI : Julia Borst.
Contact Information
Organizers:
Odome Angone (U Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar)
Julia Borst (U Bremen)
Merveilles Mouloungui (U Bremen)
Contact Email
afroeuropecyberspace@uni-bremen.de
URL
https://www.romanistiktag.de/xxxix-romanistiktag/sektionen/sektion-2/
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Africa-Asia 3 CfP, Join us in Dakar! (Only two more weeks to submit) [Announcement]
M.C. van den Haak
Announcement Type
Call for Papers
Location
Senegal
ConFest dates: 11 - 14 June 2025Location: Dakar, SenegalWebsites: English, Français, PortugaisSubmission deadline proposals: 1 October 2024 (only two weeks left!)Building on the multiple encounters, interactions and dialogues initiated at the first Africa-Asia conference (Accra, Ghana, 2015) and the second Africa-Asia Conference (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2018), this third edition of the ‘Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge’ event seeks to deepen the explorations of new realities and long histories connecting Africa and Asia.The collaborative mission of Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD, Dakar, Senegal), Collective Africa-Southeast Asia Platform (CASAP, Bangkok, Thailand) and the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS, Leiden, The Netherlands) aims to stimulate inquiry into the rich resources offered by the city of Dakar and its surroundings. In this way, the city itself enables the materialisation of an experiential Conference-Festival (ConFest) that celebrates diversity within academia, but that also extends beyond academia into civil society and the arts.Take this opportunity to engage with other participants thinking both comparatively and holistically about the challenges and possibilities of cross-continental and trans-regional encounters!The proposal deadline (1 October) for Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge 3 (Africa-Asia 3) is fast approaching. Don’t miss the chance to participate in this exciting event!
Discover the Africa-Asia 3 ClustersThe ConFest aims to facilitate transdisciplinary conversations among participants. There are 12 thematic clusters that correspond to academic trends within the global context. These clusters are meant to be general starting points for your intervention. Explore the 12 Africa-Asia 3 clusters now!
Diverse FormatsThe Africa-Asia 3 ConFest clusters can be explored through various formats, including papers, panels, roundtables, posters, as well as audio-visual and other media. We also welcome suggestions for activities and workshops that will enrich the exchange of knowledge and experiences.
Submit your ProposalsWith less than two weeks left (deadline 1 October), now is the time to submit your proposal! We are inviting proposals in English, French and Portuguese. The full Call for Proposals can be found here: https://www.iias.asia/event/africa-asia-new-axis-knowledge-third-edition
Africa-Asia Book, Craft and Food Fair Publishers and institutes are invited to exhibit at the Book, Craft and Food Fair at Africa-Asia 3 ConFest to present their work to the large number of attendees. Should you be interested in exhibiting at Africa-Asia ConFest 3, please email us: AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Information
For queries about Africa-Asia Confest 3, please visit our website or contact us at AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Email
AfricaAsia@iias.nl
URL
REMINDER: CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions [Announcement]
Christoph Gümmer
CfP Eighth European Congress on Universal and Global History
Critical Global Histories: Methodological Reflections and Thematic Expansions
Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden, 10−12 September 2025
Keynote Speakers
Laura de Mello e Souza
Fe Navarrete Linares
Call for Panels and Papers
Since its foundation in 2002, the European Network in Universal and Global History (ENIUGH) has emerged as the leading international association for research and teaching in world and global history. Following seven successful congresses in Leipzig, Dresden, London, Paris, Budapest, Turku, and The Hague, the next ENIUGH congress will be held at Linnaeus University in Växjö, Sweden. The congress will be on site only, although panel chairs may in exceptional cases allow participants to present their papers remotely.
Under the overall theme of “Critical Global Histories” we aim to further discussion, self-reflection, and the exploration of new avenues in global history. Over the past decade, global history has expanded internally (quantitatively and thematically, as well as methodologically and theoretically) and has, in doing so, influenced many other fields of research in the humanities and social sciences. At the same time, the expansion has led to debate and criticism, not least within the field. Objections have been raised against global history’s alleged macro-historical emphasis, connectivity bias, Eurocentrism, Anglophone dominance, and lack of attention to gender perspectives and Indigenous methodologies. Global history has also been accused of being imbued with neo-imperial, teleological, globalizing, exoticizing and neoliberal leanings. In recent years, decoloniality as a research practice and method has raised further questions regarding the situatedness of knowledge and the role of local sources for global history. At the same time, a current nationalist backlash in many countries has led to calls for a return to national history, thereby challenging the fundamental premises of global history.
At the Eighth ENIUGH Congress, we aim to pick up on these discussions and take a step forward by opening a space of dialogue, both between global historians and between global historians and their colleagues in other disciplines who are involved in the study of the global human pasts or who work with transnational, transregional, transcultural approaches in their respective fields. The Eighth ENIUGH-Congress will be a meeting place for scholars from all of the fields that go beyond methodological nationalism and Eurocentrism. We believe that critical thinking – both in the sense of impartial and intellectually disciplined thinking and in the sense of an augmented awareness of the many pitfalls associated with global history – can provide some of the means by which the field can evolve and retain its intellectual vigor and contemporary relevance. By framing the theme in terms of “global histories” in the plural, we aim to promote the inclusion of a broad range of voices, perspectives and orientations within the field, while forcefully rejecting the possibility of insisting on a single, dominating story or grand narrative of global history. The overall theme of the congress will be explored in a series of keynote events, roundtables, and panel discussions and in several of the regular panels and presentations at the congress.
Aside from the events related to the overall theme of the congress, we expect the congress to reflect the entire span of current research in global history, and we look forward to welcoming to Växjö scholars from all over world working on global and world history and related fields of study. Proposals can include a wide range of topics related to global, entangled, and transnational historical processes and phenomena, with no geographic or chronological limitations. While we expect most of the congress delegates to be historians, we also welcome scholars from other disciplines engaged in the study of humanity’s global pasts.
We invite contributions consisting of presentations of original research and empirically grounded work in progress, as well as theoretical, methodological, ethical, and historiographical reflections. We particularly encourage contributions that reflect on how critical thinking can be applied in global historical investigations. Although the main language of the congress will be English, individual presentations and panels in other languages can be accommodated (see further below).
In particular, we welcome contributions (both panels and individual papers) tailored to one of the following themes:
Temporalities and periodizations in global history
Ethical aspects of doing global history
Expanding the global archive
Multivocality in global history
Global history and decoloniality
Transdisciplinary approaches
Indigenous perspectives and methodologies
Challenging modernity from the perspective of global history
National history, nationalist backlash, and identity politics
Global environmental history
Nordic colonialism
In addition to the main conference themes, we also invite proposals dealing with relations, transfers and entanglements between states, peoples, communities and individuals located in or spanning different parts and regions of the world.
Proposals
We invite proposals for panels, double panels, roundtables, and individual papers. Papers and presentations may be in any language, but abstracts for all panels, roundtables, and papers must be provided in English. Panel chairs must ensure the openness, accessibility, and coherence of their panel, and it is recommended that Q&A sessions be held in English regardless of the language of the presentations. All congress delegates are expected to participate on site in Växjö. In exceptional circumstances, panel chairs may allow a minority of presentations to be held remotely.
Panels may comprise up to four presentations, and double panels may comprise up to eight presentations, in addition to commentators and chairs. Panels must consist of scholars representing at least two different institutions in at least two different countries. Double panels must include participants from at least three different institutions in at least three different countries.
Roundtables may include up to five participants, in addition to commentators and chairs. Like double panels, roundtables must include scholars from at least three different institutions in at least three different countries.
We also welcome proposals for individual papers, which, if accepted, will be assigned to a panel by the steering committee of ENIUGH. Papers that speak to one or several of the themes listed above are particularly welcome, and the theme of most relevance to the proposal should be indicated in the submission form.
Submissions
All abstracts for panels and papers must be submitted by October 15 2024 via the registration tool on our website. Please note that all speakers of a panel must submit their papers individually in addition to the collective panel submission.
Abstracts for panels should be 250 – 300 words long and should indicate all panelists, their institutional affiliations as well as their paper titles. Additionally, panel abstracts should be pertaining to one of the conference themes.
Abstracts for papers should be 200 – 250 words long and indicate whether the paper is submitted as an individual paper or as part of a panel. In the latter case the abstract should name the panel title as well as the convenor’s name.
All abstracts should be in English. If the presentation is in a language other than English, please state this in the abstract. (Papers are selected solely on the basis of content, not linguistic criteria.)
Abstracts should also indicate whether you plan to participate in person or online. Please note that the convenor and a majority of participants in each panel must participate on site.
Selected panels and papers will be notified in December 2024.
Contact Information
Panel/Paper Submission and Registration: https://research.uni-leipzig.de/~eniugh/congress/registration-tool/
Read more
By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
Call for Papers: Africa-Asia CFB
ConFest dates: 11 - 14 June 2025Location: Dakar, SenegalWebsites: English, Français, PortugaisSubmission deadline proposals: 1 October 2024 (only two weeks left!)Building on the multiple encounters, interactions and dialogues initiated at the first Africa-Asia conference (Accra, Ghana, 2015) and the second Africa-Asia Conference (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2018), this third edition of the ‘Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge’ event seeks to deepen the explorations of new realities and long histories connecting Africa and Asia.The collaborative mission of Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD, Dakar, Senegal), Collective Africa-Southeast Asia Platform (CASAP, Bangkok, Thailand) and the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS, Leiden, The Netherlands) aims to stimulate inquiry into the rich resources offered by the city of Dakar and its surroundings. In this way, the city itself enables the materialisation of an experiential Conference-Festival (ConFest) that celebrates diversity within academia, but that also extends beyond academia into civil society and the arts.Take this opportunity to engage with other participants thinking both comparatively and holistically about the challenges and possibilities of cross-continental and trans-regional encounters!The proposal deadline (1 October) for Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge 3 (Africa-Asia 3) is fast approaching. Don’t miss the chance to participate in this exciting event!
Discover the Africa-Asia 3 ClustersThe ConFest aims to facilitate transdisciplinary conversations among participants. There are 12 thematic clusters that correspond to academic trends within the global context. These clusters are meant to be general starting points for your intervention. Explore the 12 Africa-Asia 3 clusters now!
Diverse FormatsThe Africa-Asia 3 ConFest clusters can be explored through various formats, including papers, panels, roundtables, posters, as well as audio-visual and other media. We also welcome suggestions for activities and workshops that will enrich the exchange of knowledge and experiences.
Submit your ProposalsWith less than two weeks left (deadline 1 October), now is the time to submit your proposal! We are inviting proposals in English, French and Portuguese. The full Call for Proposals can be found here: https://www.iias.asia/event/africa-asia-new-axis-knowledge-third-edition
Africa-Asia Book, Craft and Food Fair Publishers and institutes are invited to exhibit at the Book, Craft and Food Fair at Africa-Asia 3 ConFest to present their work to the large number of attendees. Should you be interested in exhibiting at Africa-Asia ConFest 3, please email us: AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Information
For queries about Africa-Asia Confest 3, please visit our website or contact us at AfricaAsia@iias.nl
By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
Call for Papers: Africa-Asia CFB
ConFest dates: 11 - 14 June 2025Location: Dakar, SenegalWebsites: English, Français, PortugaisSubmission deadline proposals: 1 October 2024 (only two weeks left!)Building on the multiple encounters, interactions and dialogues initiated at the first Africa-Asia conference (Accra, Ghana, 2015) and the second Africa-Asia Conference (Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2018), this third edition of the ‘Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge’ event seeks to deepen the explorations of new realities and long histories connecting Africa and Asia.The collaborative mission of Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD, Dakar, Senegal), Collective Africa-Southeast Asia Platform (CASAP, Bangkok, Thailand) and the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS, Leiden, The Netherlands) aims to stimulate inquiry into the rich resources offered by the city of Dakar and its surroundings. In this way, the city itself enables the materialisation of an experiential Conference-Festival (ConFest) that celebrates diversity within academia, but that also extends beyond academia into civil society and the arts.Take this opportunity to engage with other participants thinking both comparatively and holistically about the challenges and possibilities of cross-continental and trans-regional encounters!The proposal deadline (1 October) for Africa-Asia, A New Axis of Knowledge 3 (Africa-Asia 3) is fast approaching. Don’t miss the chance to participate in this exciting event!
Discover the Africa-Asia 3 ClustersThe ConFest aims to facilitate transdisciplinary conversations among participants. There are 12 thematic clusters that correspond to academic trends within the global context. These clusters are meant to be general starting points for your intervention. Explore the 12 Africa-Asia 3 clusters now!
Diverse FormatsThe Africa-Asia 3 ConFest clusters can be explored through various formats, including papers, panels, roundtables, posters, as well as audio-visual and other media. We also welcome suggestions for activities and workshops that will enrich the exchange of knowledge and experiences.
Submit your ProposalsWith less than two weeks left (deadline 1 October), now is the time to submit your proposal! We are inviting proposals in English, French and Portuguese. The full Call for Proposals can be found here: https://www.iias.asia/event/africa-asia-new-axis-knowledge-third-edition
Africa-Asia Book, Craft and Food Fair Publishers and institutes are invited to exhibit at the Book, Craft and Food Fair at Africa-Asia 3 ConFest to present their work to the large number of attendees. Should you be interested in exhibiting at Africa-Asia ConFest 3, please email us: AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Contact Information
For queries about Africa-Asia Confest 3, please visit our website or contact us at AfricaAsia@iias.nl
Read more
By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
Call for Papers
Dans cette section, nous nous penchons sur l’émergence du cyberactivisme auprès des collectifs africains et afrodescendants en France et en Espagne. Les deux pays partent de contextes différents, notamment en termes de politique mémorielle par rapport à la colonisation en Afrique d’une part et eu égard à la tradition des mouvements noirs sur le sol européen d’autre part – pensons, p.ex., à la Négritude au début du XXe siècle ou au vif débat autour de l’afropéanité en France. Pour autant, nous assistons, tant en France qu’en Espagne, au boom sans précédent d’une production littéraire et activiste afro au cours des dernières années, dû en partie à une visibilité propice au sein des espaces culturels aussi bien physiques que virtuels, sous la coordination des communautés afrodescendantes et africaines menant de front un activisme à l’intersection, entre autres, de l’antiracisme, du panafricanisme et de l’afroféminisme. De même, consécutivement nous observons l’émergence de nouvelles figures africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes assumant leurs identités transversales, politisant ainsi via la littérature, l’art, le digital, etc., les problématiques qui les traversent. C’est le cas, entres autres, de Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis et Isabelle Boni-Claverie en France et de Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler et Jeffrey Abé Pans en Espagne.
Au-delà des outils traditionnels comme le livre, la presse « classique » ou la télé, les productions qui découlent de l’#afrocyberactivisme puisent aux sources de plusieurs canaux de diffusion parmi lesquels principalement les plateformes numériques, mettant en lumière des épistémologies naguère méconnues. Grâce à l’émergence du « web 2.0 », les consommateur.ices deviennent elleux-aussi des producteur.rices de contenu, participant à la création, production et circulation des savoirs en ligne. En effet, la dimension participative et interactive qu’offre le cybermonde permet aux « groupes minorés » de faire émerger leurs savoirs, discours et modèles culturels grâce à une praxis trop souvent ignorée dans les sphères mainstream. À contre-courant du récit officiel, les différent.e.s acteur.rices proposent des auto-narrations sous des formes aussi bien artistiques, politiques que littéraires. Celles-ci se caractérisent le plus souvent par de mécanismes d’auto-légitimation, notamment la diffusion de grilles de lecture alternatives relevant de façons « autres » de produire de la connaissance et même de faire science à partir d’outils endogènes, affranchis de l’hégémonie de tutelles institutionnelles. On note par conséquent une nouvelle dynamique dans les espaces numériques qui se manifeste par l’émergence exponentielle de blogs/vlogs (p.ex. Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), de magazines en ligne (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), de podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques), de profils et de contenus d’activistes sur différentes plateformes digitales comme YouTube, Facebook, TikTok et Instagram.
L’intérêt scientifique de notre section réside précisément dans l’enjeu épistémique qu’elle soulève : placer les collectifs afroeuropéens au cœur de la réflexion en faisant du cyberespace un cadre d’agentivité. En s’inscrivant dans l’innovation de la recherche académique, nous mettons en lumière les débats autour des nouvelles subjectivités concernant l’afro(euro)péanité, un lieu de négociation qui ravive les tensions à rebours des héritages en vigueur du « passé colonial ». Suivant une perspective décoloniale, la section souhaite accueillir des propositions portant sur des voix « rebelles », dissonantes ou discordantes, en ligne, qui sont symboles d’une résistance, à même de faire émerger des auto-récits afroeuropéens au cœur du cyberactivisme. Nous nous intéresserons notamment à la création de nouvelles stratégies (auto)narratives par lesquelles les acteurs.trices rendent compte de leurs expériences et récits. Par conséquent, la section entend étudier les discours et épistémologies, les subjectivités et corporalités, les routes et réseaux, les imaginaires et esthétiques, les positionnalités et connectivités, etc. qui se manifestent dans les articulations littéraires, artistiques, culturelles, activistes dans l’espace digital et ses intersections avec le monde non-numérique.
Les propositions (en français ou en espagnol) exploreront le phénomène actuel de l’#afrocyberactivisme en France et en Espagne du point de vue épistémique, en discutant des possibilités et des défis de l’espace digital en tant que moyen de décolonisation des savoirs tout en tenant compte des biais algorithmiques. De même, elles se consacreront à de cas concrets –en se focalisant sur un espace culturel ou en adoptant un point de vue comparatif– pour étudier comment ces acteur.rices se racontent elleux-mêmes afin d’explorer leurs stratégies poétiques et esthétiques. Il s’agira de se questionner sur les manières dont les corps racialisés sont racontés, rendus visibles et décolonisés sur les plateformes digitales à travers une « auto-déstéréotypisation » du sujet racialisé. Les participant.e.s analyseront les manières alternatives dont les expériences des personnes africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes sont articulées en marge ou hors des filtres du marché littéraire traditionnel en étudiant les nouveaux espaces culturels digitaux et les récits non hégémoniques qui y circulent, ainsi que les poétiques alternatives et les intertextes afro qui sont utilisés pour traduire les imaginaires des communautés marginalisées par le prisme eurocentrique. Des propositions portant sur des questions similaires en Afrique, dans les Caraïbes et les Amériques francophones et hispanophones ainsi que la circulation transnationale des savoirs sont également les bienvenues.
Sans prétendre à l’exhaustivité, les propositions de communication pourront prendre en compte les axes de réflexion indicatifs suivants :
Cyberactivisme, co-productions, décolonisation et désacadémisation des savoirs
Récits contre-hégémoniques et auto-narrations via les plateformes digitales (entre autres, les retentissements des épistèmes antiracistes, panafricanistes, afroféministes etc.)
Stratégies de résistance, esthétiques subversives et justice épistémique articulées aux textes littéraires, artistiques, culturels, activistes en ligne
Afrocyberidentités : afroespagnolité, afrofrancité, afropéanité et récits de soi
Hashtag viral, emoticones, buzz, corps-politique, collectifs afro et cybermétadiscours dans les régions respectives
Littérarisation de l’espace numérique et nouvelles poétiques et stratégies de narration de soi
By:
Jayden Hewitt
EDUCATION
Call for Papers
Dans cette section, nous nous penchons sur l’émergence du cyberactivisme auprès des collectifs africains et afrodescendants en France et en Espagne. Les deux pays partent de contextes différents, notamment en termes de politique mémorielle par rapport à la colonisation en Afrique d’une part et eu égard à la tradition des mouvements noirs sur le sol européen d’autre part – pensons, p.ex., à la Négritude au début du XXe siècle ou au vif débat autour de l’afropéanité en France. Pour autant, nous assistons, tant en France qu’en Espagne, au boom sans précédent d’une production littéraire et activiste afro au cours des dernières années, dû en partie à une visibilité propice au sein des espaces culturels aussi bien physiques que virtuels, sous la coordination des communautés afrodescendantes et africaines menant de front un activisme à l’intersection, entre autres, de l’antiracisme, du panafricanisme et de l’afroféminisme. De même, consécutivement nous observons l’émergence de nouvelles figures africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes assumant leurs identités transversales, politisant ainsi via la littérature, l’art, le digital, etc., les problématiques qui les traversent. C’est le cas, entres autres, de Léonora Miano, Mame-Fatou Niang, Aïssa Maïga, Franklin Nyamsi, Kiyémis et Isabelle Boni-Claverie en France et de Desirée Bela-Lobedde, Lucía Asué Mbomío Rubio, Asaari Bibang, Lamine Thior, Thimbo Samb, Antoinette Torres Soler et Jeffrey Abé Pans en Espagne.
Au-delà des outils traditionnels comme le livre, la presse « classique » ou la télé, les productions qui découlent de l’#afrocyberactivisme puisent aux sources de plusieurs canaux de diffusion parmi lesquels principalement les plateformes numériques, mettant en lumière des épistémologies naguère méconnues. Grâce à l’émergence du « web 2.0 », les consommateur.ices deviennent elleux-aussi des producteur.rices de contenu, participant à la création, production et circulation des savoirs en ligne. En effet, la dimension participative et interactive qu’offre le cybermonde permet aux « groupes minorés » de faire émerger leurs savoirs, discours et modèles culturels grâce à une praxis trop souvent ignorée dans les sphères mainstream. À contre-courant du récit officiel, les différent.e.s acteur.rices proposent des auto-narrations sous des formes aussi bien artistiques, politiques que littéraires. Celles-ci se caractérisent le plus souvent par de mécanismes d’auto-légitimation, notamment la diffusion de grilles de lecture alternatives relevant de façons « autres » de produire de la connaissance et même de faire science à partir d’outils endogènes, affranchis de l’hégémonie de tutelles institutionnelles. On note par conséquent une nouvelle dynamique dans les espaces numériques qui se manifeste par l’émergence exponentielle de blogs/vlogs (p.ex. Desirée Bela, Mrs Roots), de magazines en ligne (Negrxs Magazine, Les pulpeuses magazine), de podcasts (No hay negros en el Tibet, Afrotopiques), de profils et de contenus d’activistes sur différentes plateformes digitales comme YouTube, Facebook, TikTok et Instagram.
L’intérêt scientifique de notre section réside précisément dans l’enjeu épistémique qu’elle soulève : placer les collectifs afroeuropéens au cœur de la réflexion en faisant du cyberespace un cadre d’agentivité. En s’inscrivant dans l’innovation de la recherche académique, nous mettons en lumière les débats autour des nouvelles subjectivités concernant l’afro(euro)péanité, un lieu de négociation qui ravive les tensions à rebours des héritages en vigueur du « passé colonial ». Suivant une perspective décoloniale, la section souhaite accueillir des propositions portant sur des voix « rebelles », dissonantes ou discordantes, en ligne, qui sont symboles d’une résistance, à même de faire émerger des auto-récits afroeuropéens au cœur du cyberactivisme. Nous nous intéresserons notamment à la création de nouvelles stratégies (auto)narratives par lesquelles les acteurs.trices rendent compte de leurs expériences et récits. Par conséquent, la section entend étudier les discours et épistémologies, les subjectivités et corporalités, les routes et réseaux, les imaginaires et esthétiques, les positionnalités et connectivités, etc. qui se manifestent dans les articulations littéraires, artistiques, culturelles, activistes dans l’espace digital et ses intersections avec le monde non-numérique.
Les propositions (en français ou en espagnol) exploreront le phénomène actuel de l’#afrocyberactivisme en France et en Espagne du point de vue épistémique, en discutant des possibilités et des défis de l’espace digital en tant que moyen de décolonisation des savoirs tout en tenant compte des biais algorithmiques. De même, elles se consacreront à de cas concrets –en se focalisant sur un espace culturel ou en adoptant un point de vue comparatif– pour étudier comment ces acteur.rices se racontent elleux-mêmes afin d’explorer leurs stratégies poétiques et esthétiques. Il s’agira de se questionner sur les manières dont les corps racialisés sont racontés, rendus visibles et décolonisés sur les plateformes digitales à travers une « auto-déstéréotypisation » du sujet racialisé. Les participant.e.s analyseront les manières alternatives dont les expériences des personnes africaines, afrodescendantes et afroeuropéennes sont articulées en marge ou hors des filtres du marché littéraire traditionnel en étudiant les nouveaux espaces culturels digitaux et les récits non hégémoniques qui y circulent, ainsi que les poétiques alternatives et les intertextes afro qui sont utilisés pour traduire les imaginaires des communautés marginalisées par le prisme eurocentrique. Des propositions portant sur des questions similaires en Afrique, dans les Caraïbes et les Amériques francophones et hispanophones ainsi que la circulation transnationale des savoirs sont également les bienvenues.
Sans prétendre à l’exhaustivité, les propositions de communication pourront prendre en compte les axes de réflexion indicatifs suivants :
Cyberactivisme, co-productions, décolonisation et désacadémisation des savoirs
Récits contre-hégémoniques et auto-narrations via les plateformes digitales (entre autres, les retentissements des épistèmes antiracistes, panafricanistes, afroféministes etc.)
Stratégies de résistance, esthétiques subversives et justice épistémique articulées aux textes littéraires, artistiques, culturels, activistes en ligne
Afrocyberidentités : afroespagnolité, afrofrancité, afropéanité et récits de soi
Hashtag viral, emoticones, buzz, corps-politique, collectifs afro et cybermétadiscours dans les régions respectives
Littérarisation de l’espace numérique et nouvelles poétiques et stratégies de narration de soi
Read more
By:
Jayden Hewitt
EDUCATION
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
In addition to our guest-edited section described below, we always welcome submissions on a rolling basis, with no deadline for consideration. Please do think of us if your research or professional background touches on festive practices!
You can also view this announcement as a PDF.
International borders affect you every day. They play a role in determining whether you are a birthright citizen or an unauthorized migrant. They showcase a nation’s ability or inability to guarantee your wellbeing. They factor into immigration, asylum, and national security debates. Media and political analysts often portray borders as places where pathos, illegality, and poverty thrive innately. Yet, they are also places where ordinary citizens make historical claims, or defend, criticize, and even parody immigration and security policy.
While many of those border enactments are rightly serious or even melancholy in tone, some recurring rituals like border festivals foreground whimsical or celebratory narratives. This issue seeks submissions that critically engage with border festivals—recurring ritual enactments performed at, across, or in close proximity to an international boundary line that foster cross-border communication, create opportunities for practical governance, or occasion the memorialization of shared histories. It also provides a platform for scholarly and creative submissions that critically engage how borders and boundaries can be invoked metaphorically through music, literature, performance art, and/or the built environment.
Situated at the crossroads of de-centering the state and embracing the everyday-ness of borders, geographer Chris Rumford’s appeal to “vernacularize” border studies using concepts such as “borderwork” and “seeing like a border” provides an excellent starting point for this invitation to take the study of festive borders and boundaries seriously. His concept of “borderwork” emphasizes “bottom-up” activity and specifically the everyday meaning-making labor, or the bordering practices, of citizens and non-citizens (Rumford 2006, 2008, and 2013). “Seeing like a border” is premised on the idea that borders should be understood as the business of everyone, not just the business of the state. While considerations of state practices are still (and should remain) vital to the study of border festivals, it is safe to say that dominant, static, top-down approaches are incomplete.
Reflecting on anthropological theories that link festive practices to “expected” moments of life transitions (Van Gennep 1960; Turner 1987), David Picard draws attention to the ways in which festivals can also play a role in mediating unanticipated crises such as “the shock of migration” and “environmental disaster”—two global challenges that shape the contemporary study of borders. Indeed, existing studies of border festivals, traditions, commemorations, and enactments elaborate this point on a much larger scale. Methodologically diverse and ranging from festival traditions in the Senegambia and the trans-Volta (Ghana/Togo) that emphasize the “centrality of the margins” (Nugent 2019), to the meticulously choreographed Wagah ceremony that transpires at the India/Pakistan border (Menon 2013), to cultural performances that delineate the Kashmir conflict (Aggarwal 2004), to the long-standing celebration of George Washington’s Birthday on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border (Peña 2020), to the religiously-inflected and festive revival of historical social groupings between China, Mongolia, and Russia (Billé and Humphrey 2021)—they have underlined how a range of actors make national and ethnic affiliation identity claims public, stage historical memory, recover from natural disasters, and even shape practical governance through stylized acts of crossing and gathering.
Moreover, borders may also be critically invoked in the design and production of “borderless” or “borderlands” celebrations (e.g., No Border Fest, Borderland Music Festival). What stands out across these theorizations (and what makes them the key to study of border festivals) is their inbuilt foundation in performance theory and especially performativity. This special issue invites us to think creatively about the idea that borders are always in the making both at and beyond international boundary lines. In both contexts, they are actualized festively through embodiment and stylized rituals that ffect change in the social world. As the first of its kind, this issue aims to create a generative space for the future study of border festivals. We are looking for a variety of submissions ranging from previously unpublished methodological reflections, artist statements, illustrations, documentaries and interactive media to research reports and evidence-based papers that engage festive border commemorations of any kind.
Some possible themes for exploration include:
conceptualizing borders and boundaries as festive
intangible heritage and cultural memory across borderlands
organization, logistics, and finance
cross-border cooperation and practical governance
global challenges: climate change, mass displacement, public health
participation, reception, conflict, and political efficacy
festive landscapes and built environments
embodiment, choreography, and evolving repertoires
pleasure through collaboration
In line with the interdisciplinary nature of the Journal of Festive Studies, we welcome submissions of original research and analysis rooted in a variety of fields including (but not limited to): social and cultural history, anthropology, archaeology, cultural geography, architecture, technology, musicology, museum studies, literary studies and performance studies. In addition to traditional academic essays, we invite short essays and creative contributions that incorporate digital media such as timelines and maps, photographic essays, digital exhibitions, interactive media, documentaries, illustrations, creative audio, and interviews that engage with festivity.
We invite you to submit an abstract and short bio by January 15, 2025. The submission deadline for completed article manuscripts is August 1, 2025. Please make sure to consult the journal submission guidelines.
If you have any further questions, please contact Elaine A. Peña at penae@wustl.edu.
H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, the publisher of the Journal of Festive Studies, is committed to open access. All H-Net content, including journals, monographs, and reviews, are freely available to both authors and readers. There are no charges to submit or publish in the Journal of Festive Studies.
By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
Journal of Festive Studies Issue 8 Call for Papers
In addition to our guest-edited section described below, we always welcome submissions on a rolling basis, with no deadline for consideration. Please do think of us if your research or professional background touches on festive practices!
You can also view this announcement as a PDF.
International borders affect you every day. They play a role in determining whether you are a birthright citizen or an unauthorized migrant. They showcase a nation’s ability or inability to guarantee your wellbeing. They factor into immigration, asylum, and national security debates. Media and political analysts often portray borders as places where pathos, illegality, and poverty thrive innately. Yet, they are also places where ordinary citizens make historical claims, or defend, criticize, and even parody immigration and security policy.
While many of those border enactments are rightly serious or even melancholy in tone, some recurring rituals like border festivals foreground whimsical or celebratory narratives. This issue seeks submissions that critically engage with border festivals—recurring ritual enactments performed at, across, or in close proximity to an international boundary line that foster cross-border communication, create opportunities for practical governance, or occasion the memorialization of shared histories. It also provides a platform for scholarly and creative submissions that critically engage how borders and boundaries can be invoked metaphorically through music, literature, performance art, and/or the built environment.
Situated at the crossroads of de-centering the state and embracing the everyday-ness of borders, geographer Chris Rumford’s appeal to “vernacularize” border studies using concepts such as “borderwork” and “seeing like a border” provides an excellent starting point for this invitation to take the study of festive borders and boundaries seriously. His concept of “borderwork” emphasizes “bottom-up” activity and specifically the everyday meaning-making labor, or the bordering practices, of citizens and non-citizens (Rumford 2006, 2008, and 2013). “Seeing like a border” is premised on the idea that borders should be understood as the business of everyone, not just the business of the state. While considerations of state practices are still (and should remain) vital to the study of border festivals, it is safe to say that dominant, static, top-down approaches are incomplete.
Reflecting on anthropological theories that link festive practices to “expected” moments of life transitions (Van Gennep 1960; Turner 1987), David Picard draws attention to the ways in which festivals can also play a role in mediating unanticipated crises such as “the shock of migration” and “environmental disaster”—two global challenges that shape the contemporary study of borders. Indeed, existing studies of border festivals, traditions, commemorations, and enactments elaborate this point on a much larger scale. Methodologically diverse and ranging from festival traditions in the Senegambia and the trans-Volta (Ghana/Togo) that emphasize the “centrality of the margins” (Nugent 2019), to the meticulously choreographed Wagah ceremony that transpires at the India/Pakistan border (Menon 2013), to cultural performances that delineate the Kashmir conflict (Aggarwal 2004), to the long-standing celebration of George Washington’s Birthday on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border (Peña 2020), to the religiously-inflected and festive revival of historical social groupings between China, Mongolia, and Russia (Billé and Humphrey 2021)—they have underlined how a range of actors make national and ethnic affiliation identity claims public, stage historical memory, recover from natural disasters, and even shape practical governance through stylized acts of crossing and gathering.
Moreover, borders may also be critically invoked in the design and production of “borderless” or “borderlands” celebrations (e.g., No Border Fest, Borderland Music Festival). What stands out across these theorizations (and what makes them the key to study of border festivals) is their inbuilt foundation in performance theory and especially performativity. This special issue invites us to think creatively about the idea that borders are always in the making both at and beyond international boundary lines. In both contexts, they are actualized festively through embodiment and stylized rituals that ffect change in the social world. As the first of its kind, this issue aims to create a generative space for the future study of border festivals. We are looking for a variety of submissions ranging from previously unpublished methodological reflections, artist statements, illustrations, documentaries and interactive media to research reports and evidence-based papers that engage festive border commemorations of any kind.
Some possible themes for exploration include:
conceptualizing borders and boundaries as festive
intangible heritage and cultural memory across borderlands
organization, logistics, and finance
cross-border cooperation and practical governance
global challenges: climate change, mass displacement, public health
participation, reception, conflict, and political efficacy
festive landscapes and built environments
embodiment, choreography, and evolving repertoires
pleasure through collaboration
In line with the interdisciplinary nature of the Journal of Festive Studies, we welcome submissions of original research and analysis rooted in a variety of fields including (but not limited to): social and cultural history, anthropology, archaeology, cultural geography, architecture, technology, musicology, museum studies, literary studies and performance studies. In addition to traditional academic essays, we invite short essays and creative contributions that incorporate digital media such as timelines and maps, photographic essays, digital exhibitions, interactive media, documentaries, illustrations, creative audio, and interviews that engage with festivity.
We invite you to submit an abstract and short bio by January 15, 2025. The submission deadline for completed article manuscripts is August 1, 2025. Please make sure to consult the journal submission guidelines.
If you have any further questions, please contact Elaine A. Peña at penae@wustl.edu.
H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, the publisher of the Journal of Festive Studies, is committed to open access. All H-Net content, including journals, monographs, and reviews, are freely available to both authors and readers. There are no charges to submit or publish in the Journal of Festive Studies.
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By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
CFP: Africana Annual: A Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies [Announcement]
Africana Annual: A Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies
The Department of African & African American Studies at the University of Kansas and the Africana Annual and to invite the submission of full-length original articles and review essays. Africana Annual is a broadly conceived annual interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal that provides an avenue for critical dialogues and analysis of the African, African American, and African Diasporic experiences.
Aims and Scope
Africana Annual is an interdisciplinary journal encompassing history, politics, sociology, performance arts, economics, literature, cultural studies, anthropology, Africana studies, gender studies, ethnic studies, religious studies, the fine arts, digital humanities, and other allied disciplines, Africana Annual embraces a variety of humanistic and social scientific methodologies for understanding the social, political, and cultural meanings and functions of the varied experiences of Africana.
Submissions to Africana Annual must reflect the intellectual and political connections between Africa and the African Diaspora and to serve as a critical space for scholarly explorations of their shared historical and contemporary realities. We invite authors to submit work that examines key issues deepen inter-disciplinary and global conversations on topics about African America, Africa (north and south of the Sahara), and the Diaspora.
Submission Policies
Submissions to Africana Annual must be original, unpublished work not submitted for publication elsewhere while under review by Africana Annual editors. The journal encourages authors to submit unsolicited articles and comprehensive review essays. All academic articles should be between 20 and 30 pages. Comprehensive review essays should be about 10 to 15 pages in length.
Please include an abstract of 150–200 words that clearly states the main arguments of your article. The abstract should contain 3-5 keywords, along with a biographical statement of 50–75 words with full contact information and e-mail address. to accompany your submission.
Authors should submit their manuscripts using the journal system. Please contact the editors at africana@ku.edu if there are any questions. All manuscripts must follow the current edition of the Chicago Manual of Style and should use endnotes. All submissions must be in 12 point Times New Roman, double spaced, with 1″margins. Again, please note that we only accept manuscripts in Word format. All manuscripts accepted are subject to editorial modification.
Peer Review
All research articles in Africana Annual undergo rigorous peer review. After an initial editor screening, submissions will be based on anonymous double-blind refereeing by two referees.
The deadline for submission is August 31, 2024
By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
CFP: Africana Annual: A Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies [Announcement]
Africana Annual: A Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies
The Department of African & African American Studies at the University of Kansas and the Africana Annual and to invite the submission of full-length original articles and review essays. Africana Annual is a broadly conceived annual interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal that provides an avenue for critical dialogues and analysis of the African, African American, and African Diasporic experiences.
Aims and Scope
Africana Annual is an interdisciplinary journal encompassing history, politics, sociology, performance arts, economics, literature, cultural studies, anthropology, Africana studies, gender studies, ethnic studies, religious studies, the fine arts, digital humanities, and other allied disciplines, Africana Annual embraces a variety of humanistic and social scientific methodologies for understanding the social, political, and cultural meanings and functions of the varied experiences of Africana.
Submissions to Africana Annual must reflect the intellectual and political connections between Africa and the African Diaspora and to serve as a critical space for scholarly explorations of their shared historical and contemporary realities. We invite authors to submit work that examines key issues deepen inter-disciplinary and global conversations on topics about African America, Africa (north and south of the Sahara), and the Diaspora.
Submission Policies
Submissions to Africana Annual must be original, unpublished work not submitted for publication elsewhere while under review by Africana Annual editors. The journal encourages authors to submit unsolicited articles and comprehensive review essays. All academic articles should be between 20 and 30 pages. Comprehensive review essays should be about 10 to 15 pages in length.
Please include an abstract of 150–200 words that clearly states the main arguments of your article. The abstract should contain 3-5 keywords, along with a biographical statement of 50–75 words with full contact information and e-mail address. to accompany your submission.
Authors should submit their manuscripts using the journal system. Please contact the editors at africana@ku.edu if there are any questions. All manuscripts must follow the current edition of the Chicago Manual of Style and should use endnotes. All submissions must be in 12 point Times New Roman, double spaced, with 1″margins. Again, please note that we only accept manuscripts in Word format. All manuscripts accepted are subject to editorial modification.
Peer Review
All research articles in Africana Annual undergo rigorous peer review. After an initial editor screening, submissions will be based on anonymous double-blind refereeing by two referees.
The deadline for submission is August 31, 2024
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By:
Jayden Hewitt
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+5
IRELAND: SFI Sustainable Development Challenge (Over €1,000,000 Grant) 2025
Grant size: 1 million Euros
Donor: The Science Foundation Ireland
The SDG Challenge seeks to support diverse, transdisciplinary teams to develop transformative, sustainable solutions that will contribute to addressing development challenges under the UN SDGs in countries where Irish Aid works.
SFI and Irish Aid are seeking solutions that contribute to SDG 2: Zero Hunger, “End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture”.
The SDG Challenge supports highly motivated, transdisciplinary teams developing transformative, sustainable solutions for UN SDGs in Irish Aid’s partner countries. Furthermore, interested applicants should take note of the following criteria:
Teams must be transdisciplinary and focused on developing sustainable solutions for UN SDGs in Irish Aid’s partner countries.
Teams should combine technical and non-technical skills and represent collaborative partnerships between researchers in Ireland and the partner country.
Expertise in a STEM research area is necessary ,along with knowledge or experience in complementary fields like international development, economics, or behavioral science.
Two academic researchers must be in the core team, with at least one from a relevant STEM discipline.
Funding should reflect the contributions of all team members.
https://www.afterschoolafrica.com/87048/science-foundation-ireland-sfi-2024-sustainable-development-challenge-over-e1000000-grant/
By:
Tony Milanzi

No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+5
IRELAND: SFI Sustainable Development Challenge (Over €1,000,000 Grant) 2025
Grant size: 1 million Euros
Donor: The Science Foundation Ireland
The SDG Challenge seeks to support diverse, transdisciplinary teams to develop transformative, sustainable solutions that will contribute to addressing development challenges under the UN SDGs in countries where Irish Aid works.
SFI and Irish Aid are seeking solutions that contribute to SDG 2: Zero Hunger, “End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture”.
The SDG Challenge supports highly motivated, transdisciplinary teams developing transformative, sustainable solutions for UN SDGs in Irish Aid’s partner countries. Furthermore, interested applicants should take note of the following criteria:
Teams must be transdisciplinary and focused on developing sustainable solutions for UN SDGs in Irish Aid’s partner countries.
Teams should combine technical and non-technical skills and represent collaborative partnerships between researchers in Ireland and the partner country.
Expertise in a STEM research area is necessary ,along with knowledge or experience in complementary fields like international development, economics, or behavioral science.
Two academic researchers must be in the core team, with at least one from a relevant STEM discipline.
Funding should reflect the contributions of all team members.
https://www.afterschoolafrica.com/87048/science-foundation-ireland-sfi-2024-sustainable-development-challenge-over-e1000000-grant/
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By:
Tony Milanzi

No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+4
AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme (Africa)
Deadline: 4th October 2024
Grant size: Fellowship
Donor: AREF Research Development
The Africa Research Excellence Fund is pleased to launch the call for the 2024/25 AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme.
Programme Overview
Aim. To support researchers in Africa who are emerging leaders and working on important challenges for human health, to develop their skills as a researcher.
What we offer. A three to nine-month placement at a leading research institution in the UK, Europe or Africa, with additional support at your home institution before and after the placement. Up to £47,000 available
Who is eligible? Early career researchers. These are research active post-doctoral scientists and clinicians with higher qualifications who are nationals of and employed in Africa (see detailed eligibility criteria).
How to apply. Read the guidance documents carefully before developing your proposal and starting your application. Complete the application form via the portal at https://programmes.aref-africa.org.uk/
https://africaresearchexcellencefund.org.uk/funding-calls/open-funding-research-development-fellowship-2024-25/
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+4
AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme (Africa)
Deadline: 4th October 2024
Grant size: Fellowship
Donor: AREF Research Development
The Africa Research Excellence Fund is pleased to launch the call for the 2024/25 AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme.
Programme Overview
Aim. To support researchers in Africa who are emerging leaders and working on important challenges for human health, to develop their skills as a researcher.
What we offer. A three to nine-month placement at a leading research institution in the UK, Europe or Africa, with additional support at your home institution before and after the placement. Up to £47,000 available
Who is eligible? Early career researchers. These are research active post-doctoral scientists and clinicians with higher qualifications who are nationals of and employed in Africa (see detailed eligibility criteria).
How to apply. Read the guidance documents carefully before developing your proposal and starting your application. Complete the application form via the portal at https://programmes.aref-africa.org.uk/
https://africaresearchexcellencefund.org.uk/funding-calls/open-funding-research-development-fellowship-2024-25/
Read more
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
+1
Hello, joining from Nairobi, Kenya
By:
Paul Katuse
YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
+1
Hello, joining from Nairobi, Kenya
By:
Paul Katuse
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+4
Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program
Grant Size: $100,000 to $500,000
Donor: Spencer Foundation
The Spencer Foundation is pleased to announce the Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program to support education research projects that engage in collaborative and participatory partnerships. They view partnerships as an important approach to knowledge generation and the improvement of education, broadly construed. Rigorous partnership work is intentionally organized to engage diverse forms of expertise and perspectives, across practitioners, scholars, and organizations, as well as disciplines and methods, in knowledge generation around pressing problems of practice and/or policy. This grant program is open to existing partnerships between researchers and a broad array of practitioners. For example, practitioners might work in school districts, county offices of education, state educational organizations, universities, community-based organizations, and other social sectors that significantly impact learners’ lives.
https://www.spencer.org/grant_types/research-practice-partnerships
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+4
Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program
Grant Size: $100,000 to $500,000
Donor: Spencer Foundation
The Spencer Foundation is pleased to announce the Research-Practice Partnership Grants Program to support education research projects that engage in collaborative and participatory partnerships. They view partnerships as an important approach to knowledge generation and the improvement of education, broadly construed. Rigorous partnership work is intentionally organized to engage diverse forms of expertise and perspectives, across practitioners, scholars, and organizations, as well as disciplines and methods, in knowledge generation around pressing problems of practice and/or policy. This grant program is open to existing partnerships between researchers and a broad array of practitioners. For example, practitioners might work in school districts, county offices of education, state educational organizations, universities, community-based organizations, and other social sectors that significantly impact learners’ lives.
https://www.spencer.org/grant_types/research-practice-partnerships
Read more
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+1
CFAs: FRIAS Early Career Fellowships Programme
Grant Size: Fellowship
The Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (FRIAS) is inviting applications for its Early Career Fellowships Programme to support academic exchange across existing boundaries between disciplines, between different cultures and countries, between established and younger researchers.
https://www.frias.uni-freiburg.de/en/news/call-for-applications/frias-early-career-fellowship-programme
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+1
CFAs: FRIAS Early Career Fellowships Programme
Grant Size: Fellowship
The Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (FRIAS) is inviting applications for its Early Career Fellowships Programme to support academic exchange across existing boundaries between disciplines, between different cultures and countries, between established and younger researchers.
https://www.frias.uni-freiburg.de/en/news/call-for-applications/frias-early-career-fellowship-programme
Read more
By:
Tony Milanzi
No Preview Available
