

Madeleine Futter
(Alliance for African Partnerships)
Communications Intern
International Studies and Programs
Climate Change
Democracy
Discrimination
Economics
Education Abroad
Equity
Gender
Governance
Politics
Race & Ethnicity
Sustainability
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
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YIELD Documentary
Young Innovators in Entrepreneurship and Development (YIELD) published a documentary which demonstrates their success in providing youth employment and entrepreneurship opportunities! YIELD calls for agri-preneurship in order to promote employment, value addition, and higher productivity in Africa.
AAP first provided a seed grant to YIELD in 2017 and continues to support their work. YIELD aims to improve access and maximize opportunities for young entrepreneurs in agri-food systems with international partners MSU Global Youth Advancement Network, Africa Center for Economic Transformation in Ghana, and Sokoine University of Agriculture.
To check out their most recent documentary:
https://youtu.be/YxAtO09afMo
To explore resources YIELD has given for young agri-preneurs: https://globalyouth.isp.msu.edu/programs-projects/yield/yield-shop-webinar-series/
By:
Madeleine Futter
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
+1
YIELD Documentary
Young Innovators in Entrepreneurship and Development (YIELD) published a documentary which demonstrates their success in providing youth employment and entrepreneurship opportunities! YIELD calls for agri-preneurship in order to promote employment, value addition, and higher productivity in Africa.
AAP first provided a seed grant to YIELD in 2017 and continues to support their work. YIELD aims to improve access and maximize opportunities for young entrepreneurs in agri-food systems with international partners MSU Global Youth Advancement Network, Africa Center for Economic Transformation in Ghana, and Sokoine University of Agriculture.
To check out their most recent documentary:
https://youtu.be/YxAtO09afMo
To explore resources YIELD has given for young agri-preneurs: https://globalyouth.isp.msu.edu/programs-projects/yield/yield-shop-webinar-series/
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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UCLA African Studies Event: Africa's Readiness for Climate Change
Please find attached a special edition of our newsletter about the upcoming Africa’s Readiness for Climate Change (ARCC) virtual forum, organized by the UCLA African Studies Center and Earth Rights Institute.
The webinar event is scheduled for April 19-23 and registration to attend is free; register at: https://ucla.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_b5cGk3_ASFO1WEkwK2NAtA. Exact times to be announced, but starting time will be 9 am for most days as three of the presenters will be Zooming from the continent.
Confirmed Speakers are Nnimmo Bassey, Director of the Health of Mother Earth Foundation; Ousmane Aly Pame, President Global Ecovillage Network Africa,
Founder/President REDES (Network for Ecovillage Emergence and Development in the Sahel); HE Ambassador Sidique Abou-Bakarr Wai, Sierra Leone Ambassador to the US; and Elizabeth Wathuti, Founder, Green Generation Initiative and Head of Campaigns at Wangari Maathai Foundation, Kenya.
Additionally, there will be panels on Public Health, Indigenous Knowledge, Policy, and more.
For information, please email africa@international.ucla.edu or visit the conference website at https://www.international.ucla.edu/asc/article/206676 or call 323.335.9965.
By:
Madeleine Futter

CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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UCLA African Studies Event: Africa's Readiness for Climate Change
Please find attached a special edition of our newsletter about the upcoming Africa’s Readiness for Climate Change (ARCC) virtual forum, organized by the UCLA African Studies Center and Earth Rights Institute.
The webinar event is scheduled for April 19-23 and registration to attend is free; register at: https://ucla.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_b5cGk3_ASFO1WEkwK2NAtA. Exact times to be announced, but starting time will be 9 am for most days as three of the presenters will be Zooming from the continent.
Confirmed Speakers are Nnimmo Bassey, Director of the Health of Mother Earth Foundation; Ousmane Aly Pame, President Global Ecovillage Network Africa,
Founder/President REDES (Network for Ecovillage Emergence and Development in the Sahel); HE Ambassador Sidique Abou-Bakarr Wai, Sierra Leone Ambassador to the US; and Elizabeth Wathuti, Founder, Green Generation Initiative and Head of Campaigns at Wangari Maathai Foundation, Kenya.
Additionally, there will be panels on Public Health, Indigenous Knowledge, Policy, and more.
For information, please email africa@international.ucla.edu or visit the conference website at https://www.international.ucla.edu/asc/article/206676 or call 323.335.9965.
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter
No Preview Available
HEALTH AND NUTRITION
Virtual Dialogue "Vaccine Inequities in the Global South"
AAP is excited to announce its first Virtual Dialogue Event of 2021. For our inaugural dialogue, we will be highlighting conversations around COVID-19 Vaccine Inequities in the Global South.
We are delighted to partner with MSU African Studies Center, MSU Asian Studies Center, MSU Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies and MSU Institute for Global Health as co-hosts on this event. We are also looking forward to opening remarks from President of @MSU President Samuel L. Stanley, an expert in epidemiology and public health.
Our speakers will include:
Tonya Villafana, Global Franchise Head, Infection, AstraZeneca, USA
Richard Mihigo, Coordinator for Immunization & Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Programme, World Health Organization, Regional Office for Africa, Republic of the Congo
Douglas Slater, Assistant Secretary General, Human and Social Development, Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Guyana
Ova Emilia, Dean, Faculty of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Roberto Lopez, Executive Director, Acción Internacional para la Salud (AIS), Peru
Amit Kumar, Consul General of India, Chicago, USA
This international panel brings together diverse voices from the frontlines of addressing health disparities and inequities in vaccine access and distribution in a global context.
Register at the link below to attend
https://msu.zoom.us/webinar/register/5416152374824/WN_xAwE0u78TE6PuiBXe_ei-w
Learn more about the AAP Public Dialogue Series: https://aap.isp.msu.edu/engage/aap-public-dialogue-series/
By:
Madeleine Futter

HEALTH AND NUTRITION
Virtual Dialogue "Vaccine Inequities in the Global South"
AAP is excited to announce its first Virtual Dialogue Event of 2021. For our inaugural dialogue, we will be highlighting conversations around COVID-19 Vaccine Inequities in the Global South.
We are delighted to partner with MSU African Studies Center, MSU Asian Studies Center, MSU Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies and MSU Institute for Global Health as co-hosts on this event. We are also looking forward to opening remarks from President of @MSU President Samuel L. Stanley, an expert in epidemiology and public health.
Our speakers will include:
Tonya Villafana, Global Franchise Head, Infection, AstraZeneca, USA
Richard Mihigo, Coordinator for Immunization & Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Programme, World Health Organization, Regional Office for Africa, Republic of the Congo
Douglas Slater, Assistant Secretary General, Human and Social Development, Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Guyana
Ova Emilia, Dean, Faculty of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Roberto Lopez, Executive Director, Acción Internacional para la Salud (AIS), Peru
Amit Kumar, Consul General of India, Chicago, USA
This international panel brings together diverse voices from the frontlines of addressing health disparities and inequities in vaccine access and distribution in a global context.
Register at the link below to attend
https://msu.zoom.us/webinar/register/5416152374824/WN_xAwE0u78TE6PuiBXe_ei-w
Learn more about the AAP Public Dialogue Series: https://aap.isp.msu.edu/engage/aap-public-dialogue-series/
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter

CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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Announcing Journal of West African History, Volume VI, Issue II
Founding Editor-in-Chief: Nwando AchebeEditors: Saheed Aderinto, Trevor Getz, Vincent Hiribarren, and Harry OdamttenBook Review Editors: Mark Deets and Ndubueze Mbah
JWAH 6.2 NOW AVAILABLE ON JSTOR AND PROJECT MUSE!
The Journal of West African History (JWAH) is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed research journal that publishes the highest quality articles on West African history. Located at the cutting edge of new scholarship on the social, cultural, economic, and political history of West Africa, JWAH fills a representational gap by providing a forum for serious scholarship and debate on women and gender, sexuality, slavery, oral history, popular and public culture, and religion. The editorial board encourages authors to explore a wide range of topical, theoretical, methodological, and empirical perspectives in new and exciting ways. The journal is committed to rigorous thinking and analysis; is international in scope; and offers a critical intervention about knowledge production. Scholarly reviews of current books in the field appear in every issue. And the publication is in both English and French; an abstract in both languages will be provided. JWAH is published by Michigan State University Press.
Editor’s Note
Vincent Hiribarren, "African History Will Make Us Breathe"
Articles
Klas Rönnbäck, “The Built Environment of the Precolonial West African Coast: Materials, Functions, and Housing Standards”
Ismail Warscheid, “The West African Jihād Movements and the Islamic Legal Literature of the Southwestern Sahara (1650–1850)”
Holly Rose Ashford, “Modern Motherhood, Masculinity, and Family Planning in Ghana, 1960–75”
Retrospective
Jan Jansen and James R. Fairhead, “The Mande Creation Myth, by Germaine Dieterlen, as a Historical Source for the Mali Empire”
Conversations
Kwasi Konadu, “COVID-19 and Caution for Historians: Views from a Place in West Africa”
Karen Flint, “‘Africa Isn’t a Testing Lab’: Considering COVID Vaccine Trials in a History of Biomedical Experimentation and Abuse”
Alhaji U. Njai, “COVID-19 Pandemic at the Intersection of Ebola, Global Leadership, and the Opportunity to Decolonize the Political Economy of Sierra Leone”
Helen Tilley, “COVID-19 across Africa: Colonial Hangovers, Racial Hierarchies, and Medical Histories”
Book Reviews
Harry N. K. Odamtten, Edward W. Blyden’s Intellectual Transformations: Afropublicanism, Pan-Africanism, Islam, and the Indigenous West African Church, reviewed by Tracy Keith Flemming
Jonathan E. Robins, Cotton and Race across the Atlantic: Britain, Africa, and America, 1900–1920, reviewed by Andrew James Kettler
Emily S. Burrill, States of Marriage: Gender, Justice, and Rights in Colonial Mali, reviewed by Harmony O’Rourke
Katherine Ann Wiley, Work, Social Status, and Gender in Post-Slavery Mauritania, reviewed by Erin Pettigrew
Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, Mediators, Contract Men, and Colonial Capital: Mechanized Gold Mining Colony, 1879–1909, reviewed by Andrea Ringer
Submissions
The editorial board invites scholars to submit original article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 10,000 words including endnotes, 35 pages in length) accompanied by an abstract that summarizes the argument and significance of the work (not exceeding 150 words). Please see submission guidelines for detailed expectations. Review essays (not exceeding 1,000 words) should engage the interpretation, meaning, or importance of an author’s argument for a wider scholarly audience. See what we have available for review on our Book Reviews page. Please contact our Book Review editors Mark Deets mark.deets@aucegypt.edu and Ndubueze Mbahndubueze@buffalo.edu for more information.
Manuscripts submitted to the Journal of West African History should be submitted online athttps://ojs.msupress.msu.edu/index.php/JWAH/about/submissions. In order to submit an article, you will have to create an account. The site will guide you through this process.
By:
Madeleine Futter
No Preview Available
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+2
Announcing Journal of West African History, Volume VI, Issue II
Founding Editor-in-Chief: Nwando AchebeEditors: Saheed Aderinto, Trevor Getz, Vincent Hiribarren, and Harry OdamttenBook Review Editors: Mark Deets and Ndubueze Mbah
JWAH 6.2 NOW AVAILABLE ON JSTOR AND PROJECT MUSE!
The Journal of West African History (JWAH) is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed research journal that publishes the highest quality articles on West African history. Located at the cutting edge of new scholarship on the social, cultural, economic, and political history of West Africa, JWAH fills a representational gap by providing a forum for serious scholarship and debate on women and gender, sexuality, slavery, oral history, popular and public culture, and religion. The editorial board encourages authors to explore a wide range of topical, theoretical, methodological, and empirical perspectives in new and exciting ways. The journal is committed to rigorous thinking and analysis; is international in scope; and offers a critical intervention about knowledge production. Scholarly reviews of current books in the field appear in every issue. And the publication is in both English and French; an abstract in both languages will be provided. JWAH is published by Michigan State University Press.
Editor’s Note
Vincent Hiribarren, "African History Will Make Us Breathe"
Articles
Klas Rönnbäck, “The Built Environment of the Precolonial West African Coast: Materials, Functions, and Housing Standards”
Ismail Warscheid, “The West African Jihād Movements and the Islamic Legal Literature of the Southwestern Sahara (1650–1850)”
Holly Rose Ashford, “Modern Motherhood, Masculinity, and Family Planning in Ghana, 1960–75”
Retrospective
Jan Jansen and James R. Fairhead, “The Mande Creation Myth, by Germaine Dieterlen, as a Historical Source for the Mali Empire”
Conversations
Kwasi Konadu, “COVID-19 and Caution for Historians: Views from a Place in West Africa”
Karen Flint, “‘Africa Isn’t a Testing Lab’: Considering COVID Vaccine Trials in a History of Biomedical Experimentation and Abuse”
Alhaji U. Njai, “COVID-19 Pandemic at the Intersection of Ebola, Global Leadership, and the Opportunity to Decolonize the Political Economy of Sierra Leone”
Helen Tilley, “COVID-19 across Africa: Colonial Hangovers, Racial Hierarchies, and Medical Histories”
Book Reviews
Harry N. K. Odamtten, Edward W. Blyden’s Intellectual Transformations: Afropublicanism, Pan-Africanism, Islam, and the Indigenous West African Church, reviewed by Tracy Keith Flemming
Jonathan E. Robins, Cotton and Race across the Atlantic: Britain, Africa, and America, 1900–1920, reviewed by Andrew James Kettler
Emily S. Burrill, States of Marriage: Gender, Justice, and Rights in Colonial Mali, reviewed by Harmony O’Rourke
Katherine Ann Wiley, Work, Social Status, and Gender in Post-Slavery Mauritania, reviewed by Erin Pettigrew
Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, Mediators, Contract Men, and Colonial Capital: Mechanized Gold Mining Colony, 1879–1909, reviewed by Andrea Ringer
Submissions
The editorial board invites scholars to submit original article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 10,000 words including endnotes, 35 pages in length) accompanied by an abstract that summarizes the argument and significance of the work (not exceeding 150 words). Please see submission guidelines for detailed expectations. Review essays (not exceeding 1,000 words) should engage the interpretation, meaning, or importance of an author’s argument for a wider scholarly audience. See what we have available for review on our Book Reviews page. Please contact our Book Review editors Mark Deets mark.deets@aucegypt.edu and Ndubueze Mbahndubueze@buffalo.edu for more information.
Manuscripts submitted to the Journal of West African History should be submitted online athttps://ojs.msupress.msu.edu/index.php/JWAH/about/submissions. In order to submit an article, you will have to create an account. The site will guide you through this process.
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter
No Preview Available
EDUCATION
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ASA Seminar: "Emerging Schoars at Work"
Join us for an ASA Member exclusive event entitled Emerging Scholars at Work: Bridging the Gap Between Practitioners and Scholars on March 22, 12:00pm EST/UTC-4. We’ll be joined by with Jean Claude Abeck, an ASA Emerging Scholar (Howard) and Founder of the think tank Africa Center for Strategic Progress (ACSTRAP). ACSTRAP bridges the gap between knowledge and public policy process by partnering with seasoned experts both in Africa and around the world.
Zoom links to this event will be available in MyASA. Sign up to receive a reminder about this event.
To register click here
By:
Madeleine Futter

EDUCATION
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ASA Seminar: "Emerging Schoars at Work"
Join us for an ASA Member exclusive event entitled Emerging Scholars at Work: Bridging the Gap Between Practitioners and Scholars on March 22, 12:00pm EST/UTC-4. We’ll be joined by with Jean Claude Abeck, an ASA Emerging Scholar (Howard) and Founder of the think tank Africa Center for Strategic Progress (ACSTRAP). ACSTRAP bridges the gap between knowledge and public policy process by partnering with seasoned experts both in Africa and around the world.
Zoom links to this event will be available in MyASA. Sign up to receive a reminder about this event.
To register click here
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter

WATER, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT
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ACARE's 2020 Annual Report
Access the 2020 Annual Report for the African Center for Aquatic Research and Education here
"The year 2020 seemed longer than usual. When we looked up from our desks, we realized that it was not actually the 15th month of 2020, but March of 2021. The photo at the right is a perfect representation of our year of interactions.
We are excited to share with you our successes and progress from 2020. Despite interacting with you only on screens and trapped in our basements, we grew, and we continue to do so.
We look forward to another good year and anticipate we will be seeing you in person soon."
By:
Madeleine Futter
No Preview Available
WATER, ENERGY, AND THE...
+1
ACARE's 2020 Annual Report
Access the 2020 Annual Report for the African Center for Aquatic Research and Education here
"The year 2020 seemed longer than usual. When we looked up from our desks, we realized that it was not actually the 15th month of 2020, but March of 2021. The photo at the right is a perfect representation of our year of interactions.
We are excited to share with you our successes and progress from 2020. Despite interacting with you only on screens and trapped in our basements, we grew, and we continue to do so.
We look forward to another good year and anticipate we will be seeing you in person soon."
Read more
By:
Madeleine Futter
No Preview Available