MRI 2025- SELECTED PROJECTS

The Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) is pleased to share the results of the selection process for the 2025 edition of the Meaning-Making Research Initiative (MRI).

The selected projects reflect the richness and diversity of scientific approaches being developed by scholars across the continent and the diaspora, addressing strategic themes and key issues for Africa.

We warmly congratulate all selected applicants and thank all participants and members of the selection committee for their dedication.

MRI ADVANCED SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP

NAME GENDER INSTITUTIONAL AFFLIATION PROJECT TITLE
Ezebunwa Ethelbert Nwokocha M University of Ibadan, Nigeria Agency, Marginality, and Context: Exploring the Social Construction and Persistence of Twin and Albino Infanticide in the Ecology of Contemporary Nigeria

 

MRI SPECIAL CALL FOR FEMALE SHOLARS

NAME GENDER INSTITUTIONAL AFFLIATION PROJECT TITLE
1. Kehinde Oyesomi F Covenant University, Nigeria Online Gender Based Violence and Democratic Governance: Cyberbullying against Women in Politics in Nigeria and South Africa
Afolayan Georgianna Aluko F Covenant University, Nigeria
Karabo Gloria Mohapanele F University of Fort Hare, South Africa
Gloria Eneh F Federal University of Technology Minna, Nigeria
Noluthando Phungula F  University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa
2. Josephine Atieno Ochiel F Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology (MMUST), Kenya Exploring Socio-Cultural Factors Influencing Attitudes Towards The Affordable Housing Model In Rural Western Kenya:  Implications For Policy, Land Commodification And The White Elephant Syndrome
Bernadette Sabuni F Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology (MMUST), Kenya
Joyce Alusa Onzere F Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology (MMUST), Kenya
Ummilkheri Abdullahi Ali F Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology (MMUST), Kenya
3. Angèle Flora Mendy F Université Gaston Berger Saint Louis, Senegal Mobilities and Migration of African Nurses and Doctors: perspectives from countries of origin. The cases of Senegal and The Gambia

 

Tatiana Mbengue F Gaston Berger University, Saint-Louis, Senegal
Sadio Ba Gning F Gaston Berger University, Saint-Louis, Senegal
Fatmata Bah F Gambia School of Nursing and Midwifery
4. Liberata Mukamana F University of Rwanda Feminist Perspectives on Mineral Extraction: Community Resilience and Ecological Equity
Alice Mukasekuru F University of Rwanda
Josephine Mutesi F University of Rwanda
Gilbert Shyaka M University of Rwanda
5. Agnes Gisbert Kapinga F Tengeru Institute of Community Development, Tanzania Social Justice And Indigenous Rights: The Case Of Maasai Resettlement From Ngorongoro To Msomera, Tanzania
Molly Ochuka Achien F Bomet University College, Kenya
Rose Kiwia F Tengeru Institute of Community Development, Tanzania
6. Edith Natukunda Togboa F Makerere University, Uganda Commodification of Culture through Women Voices:  A Critical-Semiotic  Discourse   Analysis of Pioneer Female Artists in East Africa
Zilpah Ombijah F University of  Dar-es Salaam, Tanzania
Everlyn Kisembe F Moi University, Kenya
7. Claudine Hingston F School of Business Excellence, MANCOSA, South Africa A Comparative Study on Homeless Women in Durban, South Africa, and Freetown, Sierra Leone: The Need for Psychosocial Support and Interventions
Sylnata Johnson F University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, South Africa
Danita Tshakatumba F Health Systems Trust, South Africa
Luthando Ngazile Ngema F University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Sindisiwe Ngobese F University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
8. Patricia Tchawa Yomi F University of Douala, Cameroon Structural change and women employment: the role of informal sector in Cameroon, Senegal and Togo
Amy Ka F Cheikh Anta Diop University, Sénégal
Djinta Litaaba-Akila F University of Lomé, Togo
9. Titilope Olusegun Olalere F Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Nigeria Forest Degradation and Protection: The Role of Women in Climate Change in South-Western Nigeria and Ghana, 1900-2006
Eugenia Ama Breba Anderson F Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana
Oluwaseun Foluso Phillips F Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Nigeria
10. Marcelle Aholou F Université d’Abomey-Calavi (UAC), Benin Dynamiques de résilience des pratiques alimentaires endogènes face a la domination progressive des systèmes alimentaires étrangers
Audrey Hemadou F Université d’Abomey-Calavi (UAC), Benin
Isabelle Adjoua Kassa F Université d’Abomey-Calavi (UAC), Benin
11. Saarra Boutahar F Université Sultane Moulay, Maroc Femmes et collecte des déchets : défis, autonomisation et stratégies d’organisation dans un secteur masculinisé
Fidae El Hassouni F Université Ibn Tofail, Maroc
Nadia Saaidi F Laboratoire recherches et Etudes culturelles et sociales (LaRECS), Maroc

 

MRI GENERAL

NAME GENDER INSTITUTIONAL AFFLIATION PROJECT TITLE
1. Abeer Abazeed F Cairo University, Egypt, Pastoralism in Egypt’s South Red Sea Region: uncertainty and ecology (dis)equilibrium
Mosaab El Zayyat M Independent researcher and Co-Founder- Research Coordinator Knowledge Sharing,  Initiative, Egypt
Howida Fouda F 6th of October University, Egypt
2. Mutale Tinamou Mazimba F University of the Free State, South Africa A Comparative Analysis of Environmental Management, Resource Extraction and Social Conflict In Malawi, Zambia And Zimbabwe, 1950-2024.
Mathew Ruguwa M University of Zimbabwe
Mwayi Lusaka M Mzuzu University, Malawi
3. Alain Noindonmon Hien M University Lédéa Bernard Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso Cross-border cultural transformations in West Africa: A comparative study of family naming practices among the Dagara people of Ghana and Burkina Faso.
Gérard Millogo M Université Lédéa Bernard Ouédraogo, Burkina Faso
Faustina Aapagr Naapane F University of Ghana
4. Temilade Sesan F University of Ibadan, Nigeria Hydro Power, S(hr)inking States? Politics of Renewable Energy, Just Transitions and Urban Transformations in the Lake Chad Region.
Francis Dakyaga M Simon Diedong Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies, Ghana
Nadege Tedongmo F University of Dschang, Cameroon
Pountougnigni Njuh Ludovic Boris M University of Ziguinchor, Senegal
Tobi Adewunmi M University of Illinois, USA
5. Kais Bouazzi M Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain, Belgium) & Tunisian Water Observatory (Tunisia) Between “World Heritage” and “decoupling”: the role of infrastructure in shaping hydrosocial territories in Djerba
6. Akoth Steve Ouma M Tangaza University, Kenya Climate Change: Ontologies of Human-Nature relationships amongst the Mijikenda of Kilifi, Coast Region.
7. Getahun Fenta Kebede M Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia Ethnic-Based Displacements and the Quest for Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons in Ethiopia: A Political Economy Analysis
8. Florence Munyonyo Asiimwe F Kyambogo university, Uganda

 

The Effects of Transnational Labour Migration on Family Dynamics: An Exploratory Study of African Migrant Domestic Workers and Returnees from the Middle East.
9. Celso Monjane M University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Determinants of Economic Diversification in Resource-Rich Countries of Sub-Saharan Africa: A Political Economy Analysis
10. Kathleen Anangwe F University of Nairobi, Kenya Reparatory Justice: Towards Disengaging Colonial Legacies and Promoting Historical Rectification in Kenya and Uganda.
Francis Owakah M University of Nairobi, Kenya
George Nyongesa M University of Nairobi, Kenya
11. Chambi Chachage M Howard University, USA Living with and around Lost Cities: Swahili City-States in the Contemporary Imagination.
Nancy Rushohora F University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Caeser Bita M National Museums of Kenya
Cecylia Mgombere F University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Rehema Chachage F Academy of Fine Art Vienna, Austria
12. Augustin Pale M Université Joseph Ki-Zerbo, Burkina Faso Impacts sociaux et économiques des aires protégées en Afrique de l’Ouest : étude comparée entre le Burkina Faso et la Côte d’Ivoire
Didié Armand Zadou Zidy M Université Jean Lorougnon Guédé de Daloa, Côte d’Ivoire
Kouassi Bruno Kpangui M Université Jean Lorougnon Guédé de Daloa, Côte d’Ivoire
Alexis Kabore M Université Joseph Ki-Zerbo, Burkina Faso
13. Sidy Ndour M Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar,

Senegal

Expansion atlantique et transformations des espaces sociaux, symboliques, culturels et économiques des royaumes historiques du Baol et du Cayor, XVe-XXe siècle : approche pluridisciplinaire.
14. Hassane Mahamat Hemchi M Ecole Africaine aux Métiers de l’Architecture et de

l’Urbanisme (EAMAU), Togo

Réactiver les communs urbains : expérimentations urbaines et architecturales a Lome (Togo)

 

Guy-Hermann Mawussé Padenou M Ecole Africaine aux Métiers de l’Architecture et de

l’Urbanisme (EAMAU), Togo

Monica Coralli F Ecole Africaine aux Métiers de l’Architecture et de

l’Urbanisme (EAMAU), Togo

Léopold Carios Goutsop M Ecole Africaine aux Métiers de l’Architecture et de

l’Urbanisme (EAMAU), Togo

Abdou Kailou Djibo M Ecole Africaine aux Métiers de l’Architecture et de

l’Urbanisme (EAMAU), Togo

15. Jean Liyongo Empengele M Université de Kinshasa, RDC Destin des Archives et crise de la culture stratégique au Congo-Kinshasa
16. Fabrice Vidaley Tekou M LADICom Laboratory of the University of Abomey-Calavi, Benin Dynamiques De Resistance A La Formalisation Des Droits Fonciers Dans L’espace Soudano-Sahélien : Enjeux Et Implications Pour La Gouvernance Des Ressources Partagées
Bala Wenceslas Sanou M Impact Research Institute, Burkina-Faso
Marthe Diarra F Institute for Research in Human Sciences (IRSH) of Abdou Moumouni Uni-versity, Niger
17. Gilson Lázaro M Universidade Agostinho Neto, Angola Descentralização, autarquias locais e participação cidadã. Estudo de caso em três países africanos lusófonos: Angola, Cabo Verde e Moçambique.
Laura Nhaueleque F Instituto Superior Dom Bosco, Mozambique
Luca Bussotti M Universidade Técnica de Moçambique
18. Banjaqui Nhaga M Instituto Guineense de Pesquisa Aplicada Para O Desenvolvimento (IGPAD), Guinea Bissau Estudo de caso sobre a Migração Internacional dos jovens guineenses: Fatores motivacionais e as principais implicações.
Boaventura Rodrigues Vaz Horta Santy M Instituto Guineense de Pesquisa Aplicada Para O Desenvolvimento (IGPAD), Guinea Bissau
Jamila Lemuela do Nascimento Nhaga Bathy F Instituto Guineense de Pesquisa Aplicada Para O Desenvolvimento (IGPAD), Guinea Bissau
Vanito Ianium Vieira Cá M Instituto Guineense de Pesquisa Aplicada Para O Desenvolvimento (IGPAD), Guinea Bissau
Sueli Helena Rocha Lopes Santy F Instituto Guineense de Pesquisa Aplicada Para O Desenvolvimento (IGPAD), Guinea Bissau

CODESRIA Bulletin Online, No. 7, July 2025

SAFEGUARDING ACADEMIC FREEDOM IN AFRICA: THE 2025 DAR ES SALAAM ANNEX TO THE 1990 KAMPALA DECLARATION

Edward Mboyonga, University of the Free State, South Africa

The article was originally published as an opinion piece for African Arguments.

https://africanarguments.org/2025/06/safeguarding-academic-freedom-the-dar-es-salaam-annex-to-the-kampala-declaration/

Around the world, academic freedom in universities is increasingly under threat from the rise of populist regimes, repressive governments and heightened polarisation based on race, religion and other political divides. In China, for example, Pringle and Woodman (2022) have described the state of academic freedom in universities as being caught between a rock and a hard place, owing to increasingly repressive policies and the constant involvement of the government in the internal affairs of universities. In India, there has been a decline in freedom of academic and cultural expression in public universities, which has been exacerbated by the Hindu nationalist, Narendra Modi’s election as prime minister since 2014 (Kinzelbach et al. 2023). This has mainly been the case with universities located in minority Muslim states. Recently, the conflict in Gaza has underscored the fragile state of academic freedom in universities in the global North. In the United Kingdom (UK), Germany and the United States (US), some universities, academics and students have faced punitive repercussions for voicing their opposition to the ongoing atrocities in the world but especially in the so-called middle East. In Germany, such threats have led to a significant decline in the country’s position on the 2025 Academic Freedom Index, causing it to fall outside the top 10 per cent. Similarly, recent protests at numerous campuses in the US, along with the subsequent revocation of visas and related rights, based on allegations of antisemitic behaviour, have led to the withdrawal of state funding from major universities, including Harvard. These developments indicate a higher education environment that is increasingly characterised by threats of federal research grants being frozen, loss of tax-exempt status, control over curriculum, and self-censorship, in a nation once regarded as a shining example of democracy. Read the full Text …

CODESRIA Bulletin, No 2, 2025

NÚMERO ESPECIAL MOÇAMBIQUE – Visão de alguns intelectuais moçambicanos sobre a violência pós-eleitoral

In this Issue 

Editorial

Godwin R. Murunga & Patrícia Godinho Gomes …………………………………………………. 3

Editorial

Godwin R. Murunga & Patrícia Godinho Gomes ………………………………………………… 6

Éditorial

Godwin R. Murunga & Patrícia Godinho Gomes ……………………………………………….. 9

 

1. O “dever de violência”, ou a constituição de espaços de exercício de cidadania?

Elísio Macamo………………………………………………………………………..13

 

2. Para Além do Voto: Entendendo as razões do fracasso do diálogo pós-eleitoral em Moçambique

Egna Sidumo ………………………………………………………………………..15

 

3. Um país adiado

Rui Miguel Lamarques…………………………………………………………..19

 

4. A imprensa moçambicana na trajectória de eleições de alto risco

Tomás Vieira Mário………………………………………………………………21

 

5. Contraditório e Tutela Jurisdicional Efectiva no Processo de Proclamação e Validação dos Resultados Eleitorais

Tomás Timbane …………………………………………………………………..25

 

6. Mpesa Não É Um Trabalho: A Desigualdade, o Desemprego e a Política de um Levantamento Popular

Ruth Keila Castel-Branco……………………………………………………..27

 

7. As Redes Sociais nas Manifestações de Maputo: Uma Análise da Etnografia Digital

Dilman Michaque Gabriel Mutisse ………………………………………29

 

8. Navegando a efervescência política e intelectual pós-eleitoral em Moçambique: A experiência de uma antropóloga feminista

Katia Taela………………………………………………………………………..35

 

9. Em meio à crise e incertezas em Moçambique: o que vem a seguir?

Egídio Chaimite……………………………………………………………….43

 

You can access the special issue here

CODESRIA Bulletin Online, No. 6, May 2025

Indigenous African Knowledge and the Challenge of Epistemic Translation

Zubairu Wai, University of Toronto, Canada

Keynote Address: African Fellowships for Research in Indigenous and Alternative Knowledges (AFRIAK), Conference organised by CODESRIA, King Fahd Palace Hotel – Dakar, Senegal, 25–27 November 2024

Allow me to start by recalling an encounter at another CODESRIA meeting in Dakar, in January 2013. In collaboration with Point Sud (Centre for Research on Local Knowledge), based in Bamako, Mali, CODESRIA had co-organised a conference, ‘Africa N‘ko: Debating the Colonial Library’. The conference had brought together some of Africa’s finest intellectuals to consider the implications of what Congolese philosopher V.Y. Mudimbe designated a ‘colonial library’ on knowledge production and gnostic practices on and about Africa, as well as imagine the continent beyond the epistemic regions, structuring violence and contaminating vectors of this library.
Coinciding with the conference was Operation Serval, a French military intervention in Mali ostensibly to oust Al-Qaeda-linked Islamists who had seized control of the north of Mali and were pushing into the centre of the country. Like every other ‘savage war for peace’, Operation Serval was justified in the name of a higher ethical purpose: namely, to prevent the Malian state from collapse and rescue it from the savagery of Islamists harkening to irrational and premodern beliefs. Among those attending the conference, however, the concerns were especially over the protection of historical and cultural artefacts – specifically, the manuscripts and knowledge troves of medieval West Africa housed in a library in Timbuktu, central Mali.
Indeed, Timbuktu had, under the kings of Mali and Songhai, flourished not only as an important trading post on the trans-Saharan caravan routes but also as a thriving commercial, cultural, and especially, educational centre in medieval West Africa. The Sankoré Mosque/University, for example, attracted many famous scholars from the Islamic world from as far as Andalusia, Egypt and Syria. And this, in addition to a thriving book trade, established the city as a renowned scholarly centre in the medieval and early modern world. Under the rule of Askia Muhammad the Great of Songhai (1493–1528), for example, the Sankoré University reached its apogee. Its archives are a significant historical and cultural monument and remain one of the most important sources for the reconstruction of West African history. And only a fraction of these invaluable documents has been translated and decoded. Obviously, the need to preserve and protect this archive is beyond debate, and in the context of a conference on the colonial library and its implications for knowledge cultivation practices in Africa, the concerns over the protection of the library of Timbuktu, which forms part of the Indigenous African archives, were well founded and justified. Read the full Text …

CODESRIA Bulletin Online, No. 5, May 2025

The Changing World Order and Rise of Transcontinental Racial Politics

by Yusuf Bangura.

I recently listened to an insightful 25-minute interview of The Guardian journalist, Chris McGreal, on Democracy Now!’s YouTube channel (Democracy Now! 2025), which discussed the apartheid roots of Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, who has carved out for himself a big job in Trump’s government to reorganise the US’s federal bureaucracy. In that interview, I was struck that a group of white South Africans who were raised in the apartheid system had penetrated not only the high-tech industry in the US but also joined forces with Trump’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, inserted themselves into the Trump administration, and were part of Trump’s grand strategy to overturn the liberal order in the US and globally. The insights I gained from the interview led me to read more about the background and activities of the group. I also refreshed my understanding of hard-right or white supremacist groups in the US, Europe and South Africa, to gain insights into what looks like a convergence of interests and the transnationalisation of the group’s activities.

After listening to the interview, I hypothesised that the breakdown of the global liberal order is not only empowering authoritarian regimes across the world and ushering in old-fashioned big-power politics, as realist scholars in international relations predict; it is also connecting three types of racial politics globally. These are the politics of the anti-immigrant and pro-white MAGA movement in the US; the politics of the nativist or anti-immigrant far-right parties in Europe; and the politics of ‘white victimhood’ in South Africa, which seeks to hold back or overturn progressive social change in South Africa and elsewhere. Read more …

CODESRIA Bulletin Online, No. 4, May 2025 – V. Y. MUDIMBE: A Tribute

Zubairu Wai, University of Toronto, Canada

During the recently concluded Academic Freedom in Africa Conference, convened by CODESRIA at the University of Dar es Salaam, the gathering took a moment out of the planned schedule to reflect upon the late Professor Valentin Mudimbe. Prof. Mudimbe’s passing on 21st April 2025 occurred too close to the event for the Council to formally dedicate a session to him in the conference programme. The Council is grateful to Professor Zubairu Wai, who accepted, on short notice, to step in and deliver a befitting tribute – not only to his teacher, but also to his friend.

While CODESRIA did not have a major engagement with Prof. Mudimbe, his work reverberated immensely in discussions across all major CODESRIA convenings. His concept of the ‘colonial library’ was perhaps a good touchstone not only for conceptualizing the notion of an invented ‘Africa’, but also for exposing the erasure implicit in that construction. This erasure of the non-Europhone intellectuals and the ‘Islamic library’ was the starting point of Professor Ousmane Kane’s critique, originally published by CODESRIA and further elaborated in his subsequent writings.

It takes a great scholar to command the kind of intellectual presence that Prof. Mudimbe did. We are honoured to present a text of Prof. Wai’s tribute to him. On behalf of the Council, we extend our condolences and best wishes to his family and loved ones. To his fellow interlocutors, we are not just inspired by his erudite contributions but are challenged to carry his reflections forward with the depth and clarity he embodied.

. Read the full Text …

The Intellectual in Africa’s Policy Processes: A Convening in Memory of Prof Abdalla S. Bujra

Malindi, Kenya | 7-8 April 2025

CODESRIA is fifty-two years old. Although it was formally established in 1973, its ideational origins date back to a conference held in Bellagio, Italy in 1964 on ‘Economic Research in Africa’. Among the ten directors of African-based research institutes invited, only two were African. The rest were either French or British. The stark underrepresentation of African directors at the Bellagio conference served as a catalyst for a series of meetings by African scholars in the late 1960s and early 1970s, which came to be abbreviated as CODESRIA (Conference of Directors of Economics and Social Research Institutes in Africa).1 CODESRIA grew beyond meetings to not only acquire a recognisable name and institutional strength in the 1970s and 1980s but also earn legitimacy among African academics and policy actors. Many of these contributed in their own ways to strengthening CODESRIA’s intellectual agenda and cementing the value of its knowledge to shaping policy processes across the continent. Less well-known, yet profoundly impactful in shaping the intellectual trajectories of the Council and policy processes of several institutions, was Professor Abdalla Bujra. Bujra, as he was known in the community, passed on at home in Malindi, Kenya on 8th January 2025. His relative obscurity was not because his contributions were not of the magnitude of his peers, but rather because of his self-effacing character. Bujra was one of the last remaining founding members of CODESRIA having served as the second Executive Secretary of CODESRIA from 1975 to 1985. Prior to this, he had worked alongside the founding Executive Secretary, Prof. Samir Amin, to birth the CODESRIA we know today and put in place some of the institutional mechanisms that still define the Council. Together with Samir Amin and Adebola Onitiri, they organised the first General Assembly of CODESRIA in 1973 to formalise the organization. The firm establishment of the institutional framework of CODESRIA, and its emergence as a formidable organisation representing Africa and showcasing the best of its work in the social sciences, germinated and took root under Bujra’s leadership. During his tenure, he spearheaded and worried about growing the organisation based on a principle of institutional autonomy in a context where CODESRIA depended on external funding partners. The Council has embraced this principle based on Bujra’s pioneering thinking on institutional autonomy, and subsequent Executive Secretaries of the Council – guided by their respective Executive Committees – have upheld this as the cornerstone of CODESRIA’s engagement with those who support it. As a result, CODESRIA has developed structures that define its own independent intellectual agenda and can seek support based on this agenda. This autonomy explains why the Council has, periodically, turned away generous funding opportunities whenever potential partners define, in advance, the agenda they intend to fund.

The ability to define its own research agenda lies at the heart of CODESRIA’s commitment to basic research and its resistance to research agendas defined in advance by predetermined policy dictates. In addition to prioritising institutional autonomy, Bujra significantly contributed to establishing basic research as CODESRIA’s forte and worked deliberately to expand the Council’s intellectual agenda. Under his leadership, numerous academic conferences, seminars and workshops were organised across the continent, addressing key themes such as industrialisation, rural development, economic integration, technology, population and democracy. As the intellectual community grew and mobilized, these themes evolved, reflecting the Council’s dynamic engagement with pressing scholarly and policy concerns. The Council became interested in conceptualising the social sciences in Africa with an eye to presenting a critique of their Eurocentric foundations, conceptualising and defining the terrain of social science research in Africa, and positioning CODESRIA as the premier institution advancing African voices in the social sciences and humanities in the Continent. By the 1980s, the Council’s efforts in advancing the social sciences and humanities were well underway.

The shift in interest towards understanding the evolution and role of the social sciences was in response to the increased mobilisation of the African social science community and the emergence of epistemic communities around specific questions and debates about Africa. This mobilisation was not only about expansion but also about entrenching the community as an identifiable pan- African network. The Council had begun to mobilise different working groups, a process that eventually led, in the 1980s, to the formation of research groups variously named National Working Groups, Multi-National Working Groups and Comparative Research Networks.

The Council’s success was also affirmed by the launch and eventual coming of age of Africa Development, CODESRIA’s flagship social science journal, which is publishing its fiftieth volume this year. Bujra also oversaw the publication of numerous influential books and scholarly works. Coupled with this was a deliberate attempt to deal with the historic fragmentation of African social science communities along narrow national, regional and even linguistic lines. CODESRIA introduced a multilingual publishing approach with translations of its publications in at least two languages spoken widely within Africa’s intellectual communities. Translations from English to French and vice versa became almost compulsory at meetings CODESRIA organised. Bujra articulated the vision for publications and translations in his Editorial in the inaugural issue of Africa Development. After reviewing the growing literature on the study of the continent, highlighting gaps and numerous weakness that left an intellectual space for Africa Development to fill, he justified the need for the Council to focus on the problem of underdevelopment, arguing that existing studies were not illuminating on the fundamental nature of the development process. For him, the ultimate objective was ‘to provide an opportunity for African scholars to contribute to the general development of the continent through vigorous discussion of existing development strategies, problems  and  alternatives’.  Speaking directly  about  the  purpose  of  the  Africa Development, Bujra wrote, that it would seek to draw attention to the neglected areas of research in Africa and “to provide a forum for African (and non-African) scholars to debate on important issues as well as to make known the findings of their research. In this way, we hope to encourage more relevant and policy-oriented research within an African perspective. The ultimate objective is to provide an opportunity for African scholars to contribute to the general development of the continent  through  vigorous  discussion  of  existing  development  strategies,  problems  and alternatives. I am an optimist and therefore am sure that this challenge will be taken up by African social scientists.”

By the time Bujra left the service of CODESRIA in 1985, the image of CODESRIA as a pan- African organisation that represented the best of Africa’s intellectual contributions in the social sciences and humanities had taken shape. By establishing this sound basis for institutional practices, Bujra and the colleagues he worked with ensured that African engagement with global discourses shifted away from the colonial and Afro-pessimist pedigree they had largely been based on to a less racist and more political economy-driven orientation.

Abdalla Bujra’s work serves as both an important entry point and a vantage point for examining the role of the intellectual in Africa’s policy arenas. While this meeting is organised to honour his memory and commemorate his contributions, reducing these contributions to personal tributes of his life would be a disservice to his legacy. It is essential to also reflect on the broader context from which Bujra came from at the Kenyan coast, the academic engagements he undertook, the policy interventions he pioneered or led, and the implications of those policies on a range of actors and institutions across the continent and beyond. It is, for instance, useful to reflect on the “alternative to the scorched-earth market liberalization agenda then being pursued by the IMF and the World Bank” that Bujra led. Prof. Chege, in his Tribute to Bujra, argues that the DPFM which Bujra founded and led “took the middle position in the debates around economic liberalisation vouching for “market economies with social welfare benefits for all.” He further noted that in Bujra’s 2005 edited book on democratic transition in Kenya, Bujra advocated “‘a struggle from liberal to social democracy”’, not the hard-left Maoism of some of his former Dar es Salaam colleagues.” How have the ideas that Bujra advanced panned out in Kenya or Africa more broadly? and what elements of his thinking should we carry forward as we critically reflect on the current global changes?

This convening will therefore be organised around three formats: i) family reflections on Bujra’s life; ii) personal tributes from those who knew, lived with and engaged Bujra; and iii) intellectual reflections on his scholarly/intellectual contributions, culminating in an attempt to tease out the key issues that constitute our understanding of the role of the intellectual in Africa’s policy processes. The programme agenda is organised around these formats but also includes an afternoon visit to Bujra’s place of internment. Participants in the meeting include senior members of the CODESRIA community,  former  Executive  Secretaries,  former  and  current  members  of  the  Executive Committee and colleagues from the local Kenyan universities who knew or engaged Bujra in various capacities. We are also privileged to be joined by Bujra’s family including his two sons, brothers and sisters, and friends and comrades from Malindi and Lamu.

 

1 The original meaning of CODESRIA was the Conference of Directors of Economics and Social Research Institutes in Africa. As CODESRIA’s agenda evolved, it retained the acronym while redefining its full name, first as the Council for the Development of Economic and Social Research in Africa, and finally to its current iteration: the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. See the piece in CODESRIA Bulletin, https://journals.codesria.org/index.php/codesriabulletin/article/view/338/342.

CODESRIA Bulletin , number 1, 2025

 Special Issue Reflection on the Contribution of CODESRIA Second Executive Secretary 

In this Issue 

Walking with Professor ABDALLA S. BUJRA // Cheminer avec le professeur ABDALLA S. BUJRA

  1. Prof. ABDALLA BUJRA, 1938–2025: CODESRIA’s Towering Pillar  Godwin Murunga ………………………………………. 3
  2. Prof. ABDALLA BUJRA, 1938–2025: le pilier gigantesque du CODESRIA   Godwin Murunga ………………………….. 7
  3. Editorial to Inaugural Issue of Africa Development, Volume 1, Number 1, 1976 (Republished) Abdalla S. Bujra ………………………….11

Tributes to ABDALLA BUJRA // Hommages à ABDALLA BUJRA

4. Condoléances à la famille de BUJRA et au CODESRIA Condolences to Bujra’s family, and to CODESRIA  Taladidia Thiombiano. …………………………………………………..15

5. Professor ABDALLA SAID BUJRA, 1938–2025: A Pioneer Pan-Africa Scholar, An Institution-Builder and Man of Conscience Michael Chege …………………………………………………….15

6. A Tribute to ABDALLA BUJRA  Peter Anyang’ Nyong’o ……………………………………………17

7. Homage to ABDALLA BUJRA  Mahmood Mamdani …………………………………………………………………18

8. ABDALLA BUJRA: A Life of Unparalleled Service Adebayo Olukoshi    …………………………………………………..19

9. ABDALLA BUJRA’s Legacy in Building the CODESRIA Community  Mshaï Mwangola ………………………………………20

10. ABDALLA S. BUJRA, and Futures Studies in Africa: A Noticer’s Environmental Scanning  Leopold Mureithi ……………………….22

Other Thematic Interventions // Autres interventions thématiques

11. Why France Can’t Be Nigeria’s Strategic Partner Yusuf Bangura ……………………………………………………..27

12. Indigenous African Knowledge and the Challenge of Epistemic Translation Zubairu Wai ……………………………..40

Announcements // Annonces

13. African Fellowships for Research in Indigenous and Alternative Knowledges (AFRIAK)…………………………………54

14. Bourses pour la recherche sur les savoirs indigènes et alternatifs en Afrique (AFRIAK)…………………………………….57

You can access the special issue here

ACADEMIC FREEDOM CONFERENCE: Application opportunities for self-sponsored participants

University of Dar es Salaam, 29th April – 2nd May 2025

The Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) is delighted to announce a limited number of additional opportunities on its agenda for participation in the forthcoming conference on Academic Freedom in Africa: Revisiting the Kampala Declaration. We invite individuals or institutions that wish to participate to submit their requests for consideration. The Council will select, on a competitive basis, those whose applications are assessed to be relevant to the objectives and agenda of the conference. Both individual and institutional applications are welcome.

Those wishing to submit applications should take note of the following.

Application Process:

  • Individual applicants should submit applications that include the following details:
    • Full names.
    • Designation
    • Institutional affiliation.
    • Nationality
    • A brief explanation, not exceeding 300 words, on why they wish to participate in the Academic Freedom Conference.

*The explanation should state the CODESRIA membership status of the applicant.

  • Institutional applicants should submit applications that include the following details:
    • Name of institution.
    • Full names, designations, and nationalities of all the participants the intends to sponsor.
    • A brief explanation, not exceeding 300 words, stating why the institution wishes to participate in the Academic Freedom Conference.

*The explanation should state the institution’s CODESRIA membership status.

  • Application closes on the 04th April 2025.
  • A notification including registration procedures will be sent directly to successful applicants.

Participation costs:

  • The overall costs of participation in the conference are detailed below:
USD XOF EUR
Registration fees 300 180 300 275
Subsistence 250 150 250 229
Member fee 50 30 050 46

*Exchange rate:  1USD = 601 XOF / 0.91 Eur               Source: Oanda.com of 18/03/2025

  • Payment for the conference entitles the participant to the following:
    • Participation in all conference sessions.
    • Conference registration pack and access to all conference documents.
    • Coffee and lunch at the conference venues.
  • The participant will bear all other expenses relating to the Conference.

How to Apply:

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