Prof. Abdalla S. Bujra (1938-2025) CODESRIA’S TOWERING PILLAR

The Council has learned of the passing on of Professor Abdalla Bujra this morning at his home in Malindi, Kenya, where he had been recuperating following a long illness.

Prof. Bujra served as the second Executive Secretary of CODESRIA from 1975-1985. Prior to this, he had worked alongside the founding Executive Secretary, Prof Samir Amin, roughly from the Council’s inception in 1973 before formally taking over leadership in 1975. The establishment of the institutional framework of CODESRIA as we know it today, 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 his leadership.

During his tenure, he spearheaded and significantly contributed to over 50 academic conferences, seminars, and workshops across the continent; addressing critical themes such as industrialization, rural development, economic integration, technology, population, and democracy. He mobilized the African social science community by establishing both Pan-African and national research groups. Notably, he launched the renowned journal Africa Development which is set to publish its 50th Volume this year and oversaw the publication of numerous influential books and scholarly works. In 1992, he was honoured with the CODESRIA Distinguished African Social Scientist Award for Institution Building alongside other luminaries Govan Mbeki and Prof. Samir Amin. This accolade is a testament of the monumental impact of his leadership and his enduring contributions to African institutions.

By the time he 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, Prof. Bujra and the colleagues he worked with ensured that African engagement with global discourses shifted away from the colonial pedigree they had largely been based upon to less racist and a more political economy driven orientation.

After his work at CODESRIA, Prof. Bujra played vital roles as a consultant for African institutions such as UNECA. He also founded the Development Policy Management Forum (DPMF), where he mentored emerging scholars, including Said Adejumobi, with whom he co-edited several publications. In addition, he lent his expertise to the Lamu Port campaign, advocating for the development of a regional transport corridor serving northern Kenya and South Sudan.

A distinguished sociologist, Prof. Bujra published extensively on governance and development in Africa. Among his notable works are The Politics of Stratification in a South Arabian Town (1971), Africa and the Future (1995), Leadership, Civil Society and Democratization in Eastern and Southern Africa (2002, two volumes), Perspectives on the OAU/AU and Conflict Management in Africa (2004), and Kenya’s Democratic Transition: The Struggle from Liberal to Social Democracy (2005).

For the CODESRIA community, we have lost a firm pillar around which our work was built, organised, executed and given historical legitimacy. His dedication, vision, and leadership continue to inspire us. The Council will do everything to memorialise him and keep the record of his work alive.

Prof. Bujra has been laid to rest today, Wednesday, 8th January 2025 in Malindi. While it is indeed a sad start of the year for the CODESRIA family with his passing, we are alive to the fact that he left us all the best wishes and a legacy that is dotted all over the CODESRIA publications especially he CODESRIA Bulletin and this remains alive in the work we do.

Godwin R. MURUNGA

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

8th January 2025

Tributes to Professor Momar Coumba Diop

The Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) is saddened to learn of the passing of Prof. Momar Coumba Diop in Paris on 9 July 2024 following a long illness. Prof. Diop was 73 years old at the time of his death. 

A Library is Gone: Tribute to Professor MOMAR COUMBA DIOP, (1951–2024)

Godwin R. Murunga

Executive Secretary, CODESRIA 

Une bibliothèque s’en est allée: Hommage au Professeur Momar Coumba Diop, 1951-2024

Godwin R. Murunga

Secrétaire exécutif du CODESRIA

MOMAR COUMBA DIOP, l’aristocrate de la pensée

Penda Mbow

Historienne, Université Cheikh Anta Diop

Dakar, Sénégal

 

MOMAR COUMBA DIOP, un défricheur de sources et de ressources documentaires

Mamadou Diouf

Columbia University, New York, États Unis 

 

Paulin J. Hountondji (1942 – 2024): A tribute to a great thinker

It is with profound sorrow and a sense of great loss that the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) received news of the passing of eminent Beninese philosopher, Professor Paulin Hountondji, on 2nd February 2024. Born on April 11th, 1942, Professor Hountondji became a towering intellectual figure and distinguished scholar who shaped the discipline of philosophy by advancing unparalleled insights and elaborating new thinking in the field of ‘African philosophy’. His contributions alongside the works of the late philosophers Kwesi Wiredu, Kwame Gyekye, and Henry Odera Oruka gave meaning and depth to the key debates that were happening among Africans who engaged in elaborating the question of philosophy in Africa.

Professor Hountondji’s profound intellect and dedication to the advancement of scholarship has left an enduring impact on the African intellectual landscape. He provided bold leadership at a critical juncture  in Africa’s intellectual history by challenging conventional wisdom on ‘African Philosophy’, thus playing a pivotal role in shaping the discourse on and in philosophy in Africa. His seminal explorations on that matter include an analysis of the myth and realities of the existence of African philosophy in the book “Sur la “philosophie Africaine” :critique de l’ethnophilosophie” (1976). This work, which was translated into English as “African Philosophy: Myth and Reality” (1983) catalysed robust debate, and has continued to influence and inspire myriad African thinkers in the decades since.

Professor Hountondji’s intellectual journey intertwined with CODESRIA in the 1990s, where he engaged in a ground-breaking project supported by the Council that culminated in the publication of his influential 1994 book, “Les Savoirs Endogènes : Pistes pour une Recherche” translated as Endogenous Knowledge: Research Trails” (1997). According to Prof. Tade Akin Aina, under whose guidance the book was published, “Prof Hountondji was a self-assured, committed and courageous trailblazer.” Prof. Hountondji nurtured his relationship with CODESRIA, immersing himself in the intellectual and governance affairs of the Council. He was, for instance, a resource person to the 1999 African Humanities Institute convened at the University of Ghana-Legon by Professor Kofi Anyidoho and directed by Professor Kwame Gyekye. Convened under the theme “African Philosophy”, the laureates of the institute were exposed to the long-standing debates around ethnophilosophy. Prof. Gyekye had just published his Tradition and Modernity: Philosophical Reflections on the African Experience and Prof. Hountondji was on hand to celebrate the books’ departure from the ethnophilosophical approach. Ultimately, Prof. Hountondji not only identified the massive extraversion of knowledge about Africa but also questioned how African Studies could be understood as African given such massive extraversion.. He attempted to fill that gap of extraversion with complementary work on endogenous knowledge.  It is now widely acknowledged that his enduring legacy in the work he did with CODESRIA would best be captured through notions of ‘extraversion’ and ‘endogenous knowledge.’

Professor Hountondji was later elected as a member of CODESRIA’s Executive Committee at the 10th General Assembly held in Kampala, Uganda in 2002, and served as Vice-President of CODESRIA under the Presidency of Zenebeworke Tadesse (2002 – 2005). He continued to engage the Council after he left the Executive Committee, making invaluable contributions to the Council’s pan-African mandate of promoting research and fostering intellectual engagement within the social sciences and humanities. To this day, his contributions within the CODESRIA and the broader epistemic community remain immeasurable.

His commitment to the pursuit of knowledge was unwavering as exemplified by his lifelong dedication to learning. Even after achieving academic and intellectual acclaim, and long after obtaining a doctorate from the University of Paris-Nanterre in 1970, Professor Hountondji remained a lifelong student, continuing on to earn his doctorat d’Etat at l’Université Cheikh Anta Diop under the supervision by Professor Souleymane Bachir Diagne. The text of his doctorat d’Etat, published as “Combats pour le Sens: Un Itinéraire Africain in  1997, and later translated into English in 2002 as “The Struggle for Meaning: Reflections on Philosophy, Culture and Democracy in Africa”,  has also become a classic text in the study of philosophy.

In addition to his scholarly pursuits, Professor Hountondji served briefly in the government of the Republic of Benin, holding roles as the Minister of Education from 1990-1991 and then as Minister for Culture and Communications from 1991-1993. His legacy of political service continued even after he resigned in 1994 to return to teaching. He was a professor of philosophy at the National University of Benin and also served as director of the African Centre for Advanced Studies in Porto-Novo, Benin.

The Council extends its deepest condolences to Professor Hountondji’s family, friends, colleagues, and the entire academic community both in Benin and beyond. It was an honour, indeed a privilege, that Professor Hountondji dedicated such generous time and intellectual skill to CODESRIA. Not only does the Council feel the privilege, but it also is happy to share in the legacy he left behind. To honour his legacy, CODESRIA will remain steadfast in its commitment to nurturing critical engagement and championing the pursuit of knowledge within the social sciences and humanities. As we bid farewell to a luminary, may his intellectual flame continue to inspire generations to come.

حلمي شعراوي 1935-2023

زميلاتنا و زملاءنا الأفاضل،

تحية كريمة،

تلقى المجلس  ببالغ الحزن والاسى نبأ وفاة أحد أعلام كوديرسيا (CODERSIA) الاستاذ حلمي شعراوي أستاذ في مركز البحوث  العربية والإفريقية(AARC) في القاهرة بمصر. توفي حلمي، كما كانت شهرته في مجالس كوديرسيا، حوالي 10:30 صباح يوم الإثنين 20 مارس 2023 و دفن في وقت لاحق من نفس اليوم في القاهرة. و ستقام التعازي الرسمية يومه الأربعاء 22 مارس 2023 بمسجد عمر مكرم بميدان التحرير بالقاهرة على الساعة السادسة مساء.

كان البروفيسور حلمي شعراوي حتى وفاته واحدا من “مناضلي” كوديرسيا القلائل المتبقيين.

ولد عام 1935 و نشأ ليتبنى سياسات عموم إفريقيا  لجيل الاستقلال في القارة السمراء. لقد حارب البروفيسور حلمي وتجاوز فكرة تقسيم القارة إلى إفريقيا شمالية وأخرى جنوب-صحراوية.

لم يكن فقط أكاديميا عظيما بما لايقل عن 13 كتابا في رصيده، بل ومارس قناعاته الفكرية أيضا.

إضافة إلى ذلك، كان ناشطا سياسيا في عهد الرئيس جمال عبد الناصر و كان » حلقة وصل «   بين حكومة عبد الناصر و حركات التحرير الأفريقية التي أنشأت مكاتبها في القاهرة خلال تلك الفترة”. كان حلمي فعالا للغاية في وظيفته حتى أن اسمه أصبح  أسطورة أكسبته مكانة قوية في ذاكرة أولئك الذين اعتمدوا عليه كمنسق لمكتب حركات التحرير الأفريقية في الاتحاد الأفريقي تحت رعاية رئيس مكتب الشؤون الأفريقية. درس وعمل في العديد من البلدان الأفريقية قبل أن يصبح مديرا ل AARC من 1987 إلى غاية 2020. وخلال هذه الفترة، طورت CODERSIA شراكتها التي نتجت عن استضافة ندوة النوع الاجتماعي في القاهرة لعدة سنوات. ونتجت هذه الشراكة كذلك عن سلسلة منشورات مشتركة تحت عنوان مختارات أفريقية عربية للعلوم الاجتماعية تم اختيار منشورات CODERSIA وترجمتها إلى اللغة العربية. عمل الأستاذ حلمي أيضا في اللجنة التنفيذية ل CODERSIA من سنة 2011 إلى سنة 2015. رحيل حلمي شعراوي هو بالفعل تجسيد لمعنى عبارة ” نهاية حقبة”.

فنيابة عن اللجنة التنفيذية والأمانة العامة وكل أعضاء CODERSIA ، نتقدم بأحر التعازي إلى زوجة الفقيد، السيدة توحيدة و نجله السيد أيمن وابنته السيدة مي وإلى أصدقاء وأقارب ورفاق المرحوم حلمي شعراوي. فلترقد روح الفقيد في سلام أبدي.

                                                                       Godwin.R MURUNGA

              السكرتير التنفيذي.

              20 مارس 2023.

Helmi Sharawy, 1935-2023

Greetings colleagues,

The Council has received the sad news of the passing on of one of CODESRIA’s luminaries, Prof. Helmi Sharawy of the Arab and African Research Center (AARC) in Cairo, Egypt. Helmi, as he was popularly known in CODESRIA circles, passed around 10.30am this Monday morning 20th March 2023. He was buried later in the day in Cairo. The official condolences will be held on Wednesday 22nd March 2023 at Omar Makram Mosque in Taharir Square, downtown Cairo at 6pm.

Prof. Helmi Sharawy was until his death one among the few remaining ‘militants’ of CODESRIA. Born in 1935, he grew up to embrace the pan-African politics of the independence generation in Africa. Helmi fought against and transcended the idea of two Africas, the idea that perceived North Africa as separate from sub-Saharan Africa. Not only was he a great academic with at least 13 books to his credit, he also practiced his intellectual convictions. He was politically active during Gamal Abdel Nasser’s period and served as a “liaison between Nasser’s government and the various African liberation movements which established offices in Cairo during that period.” Helmi was so effective at his job that his name was almost legendary to the point that it earned him a powerful place in the memory of those who relied on his position as the coordinator for African Liberation Movements office at the African Association under the auspice of the President’s Office of African Affairs. He taught and served in many African countries before becoming Director of the AARC from 1987 to 2010. It was during his time at AARC that CODESRIA grew the partnership that led to the hosting of the CODESRIA Gender Symposium in Cairo for several years and the joint publication series titled Afro-Arab Selections for Social Sciences. The series selected and translated CODESRIA publications into Arabic. Helmi also served on the CODESRIA Executive Committee from 2011 to 2015. The passing on of Helmi gives meaning to the words “end of an era.”

Helmi Sharawy is survived his wife, Tawhida, a son, Ayman, and daughter, Mai. On behalf of the Executive Committee, the Secretariat and the broader membership of CODESRIA, we send our deepest condolences to the family, friends, relatives and comrades of Helmi Sharawy. May his soul rest in eternal peace.

Godwin R. MURUNGA

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY.

20th March 2023.

Dr. Berit Olsson: A Truly Formidable Woman of Courage and Vision.

The Council for the Development of Social Sciences Research in Africa (CODESRIA) received of the news of the passing on of Dr Berit Olsson, former Director of SAREC, Sida’s Department for Research Cooperation on Thursday 31st March 2022. We were happy to have been allowed to send a confidential note of condolence to the family. But given the importance of Dr Olsson to the Council and to the research corporation community, it is my privilege, on behalf of CODESRIA and its community of scholarship to share this note publicly.

Dr Berit Olsson assumed the leadership of SAREC as its Director in 1998 and served in that position to 2008. This was also the year when SAREC, then responsible for improving research capacity in low-income countries, was disbanded in the context of a broader reorganization within Sida. For the period of her leadership, Dr Olsson developed a close relationship with many organizations and researchers in the global South, this being the reason why she was highly regarded in CODESRIA circles.

The news of her passing on therefore came to CODESRIA as sad indeed. For many years, she worked tirelessly and with admirable commitment to support the relationship that Sida/SAREC nurtured with CODESRIA – and, indeed, many other organizations in the global South, most especially in Africa, Asia and Latin America. These organizations included CLACSO which at the time was also exploring the possibility of developing a tri-continental partnership framework and SAREC was one of the few organizations, alongside Ford Foundation, that helped drive this initiative. This led to the emergence of a number of South-South initiatives that have subsequently bolstered greater engagement between CODESRIA and other institutions in the global South.

To understand the significance of Dr Olsson’s leadership at SAREC to the African research community, the context within which she operated is instructive. The 1980s and 1990s were critical years, marked by a sharp decline in the fortunes of African universities due to the onslaught precipitated by the Structural Adjustment Programmes. The decline that followed had many adverse implications,  especially in the realm of funding and research training capacity in African universities and research centers. These affected Africa in ways that were, in a number of instances, new and unanticipated.  As the state in Africa divested from funding universities and research in general, education and research in the universities were subjected to the logic of the market in ways that undermined commitment to endogenous research in developing countries. This logic asserted that investment in education was useless to make unless the rate of return on investment were good. This indeed became the language of the Bretton Woods institutions.

The resulting challenges presented themselves in ways that only a visionary leader could understand. Working with those affected, such leaders would be called upon to embrace suitable interventions to help forestall a full collapse in the higher education and research sector in the continent. Dr. Olsson was one such leader, capable of listening to and understanding the new challenges to higher education and willing to work with those affected to facilitate solutions.

Dr Olsson worked closely with CODESRIA and supported the sustenance of independent research work and the renewal of research capacity across Africa through core and ear-marked multi-year support. Through such funding, the institutional health of organizations SAREC funded was enhanced while the research capacities were built. She understood that institutional health was necessary for building research capacity and invested in it. As a result, she became a trusted friend and a reliable ally of the African social science research community represented by CODESRIA and similar organizations.

On numerous occasions, she joined the community in several meetings and keenly listened to presentations and interventions from a range of scholars and policy actors. She was good at thinking through what the best options out of persisting challenges would be. This gave her a rare look into, and genuine understanding of the challenges African scholars and policy intellectuals were grappling with and their priority concerns. She used these insights to frame SAREC’s interventions in a manner that built resilience in the face of adversity, nurtured agency at a time of immense repression, and defended the intellectual freedom of scholars amidst a massive erosion of university autonomy.

Many in CODESRIA community will recall the second last meeting Dr Berit Olsson attended at CODESRIA. At the time, SAREC sought to allocate resources to support gender research in Africa. CODESRIA was invited to prepare a background paper. Soon after the review of the paper, a decision was taken to convene a range of scholars to discuss the content of this proposed intervention. The meeting, held in Dakar in April 2007, was a meeting of minds, bringing together the best of African feminist thinking and contributed to re-shaping CODESRIA gender work to enhance feminist entry points and perspectives.

Dr. Olsson’s name easily appears alongside most mentions of research, research cooperation, higher education and innovation in Africa and beyond. CODESRIA felt the impact of her leadership in positive and rewarding ways even as she never compromised the importance of accountability and prudence in the use of public funds delivered to the research community in solidarity and enlightened self-interest. One of the lasting imprints she made on the relationship with organizations SAREC partnered with under her leadership was their conscious empowerment. She encouraged and championed the autonomy of our institutions, aiming that they independently think through their research agenda while being assured of support for innovative and relevant ideas. “I believe that if people [in developing countries] have developed analytical skills and have the tools to analyse,” she argued, “they will both be able to better access international research as well as define their research questions differently than those who are based in the north,” CODESRIA’s autonomy as a pan-African institution was guaranteed so long as the judicious and transparent use of resources was evident. If there ever were allies who also defended the independence and autonomy of African researchers and institutions against donor pressures, Dr Olsson was a fine example.

On behalf of CODESRIA, its Executive Committee and the broader membership, we join in sharing our condolences on the passing of a truly formidable woman of courage and vision. CODESRIA is lucky to have recorded its appreciation of Dr. Olsson at the 13th CODESRIA General Assembly in Yaoundé, Cameroon when the Council formally thanked and bid her goodbye pending her retirement.

We wish Dr. Olsson’s family, especially Björn Olsson and  Susanna Mjörnheim, friends and former colleagues at Sida our best in this difficult transition and pray for the grace they need to remember her as she takes her eternal rest.

Godwin R. MURUNGA

Executive Secretary

12th May 2022.

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