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Call for Papers

Theme: Africa's Many Divides and Africa's Future
Type: 2nd Biennial Kwame Nkrumah International Conference
Institution: Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
   Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Location: Kumasi (Ghana)
Date: 21.–24.9.2012
Deadline: 15.12.2011

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The Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi,
Ghana, and Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Vancouver, Canada, invite
you to participate in the 2nd Biennial Kwame Nkrumah International
Conference at the beautiful campus of the Kwame Nkrumah University of
Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana

DATE: September 21-24, 2012.
THEME: Africa’s Many Divides and Africa’s Future

“If in the past the Sahara divided us, now it unites us.” Dr. Kwame
Nkrumah declared some fifty years ago. Keenly aware of Africa’s many
artificial divides, Nkrumah was determined to lead a revolution that
would bridge those divides. One way to achieve this goal, Nkrumah
proposed, was a continental pan-African government, which would
provide the African people the opportunity to pool and marshal their
enormous real and potential economic, human and natural resources for
the optimal development of their continent. A continental union
government, Nkrumah was convinced, would ensure that Africa ended the
divisions created by the trilogy of enslavement, colonization and
neo-colonization of Africans. Nkrumah was concerned by other
divisions as well; those created by time/history, nature and above
all those created by Africans themselves, such as ethnic/ racial, and
religious discrimination, classism, sexism, ageism, as well as
atavistic and backward traditional practices, including ‘tribalism’
and patriarchy.

Nkrumah had long predicted that unless Africans formed a political
and economic union to address the continent’s acute problems, the
raging ‘revolutions’ in the north of the continent, religious, and
ethnic strife and civil wars in other parts of Africa were
inevitable. He warned that unless urgent steps were taken to bridge
Africa’s divides, Africans would be warring among themselves as their
detractors and neo-colonialists hide behind the scene pulling
“vicious wires” to cut “each other’s throats.” For him, these
upheavals are all masked economic “wars.” For him, these upheavals
are all masked economic “wars.” In other words, these wars and
unrests are struggles over scarce economic resources and scrambles to
control political power. Religion and “tribalism” are mere fronts for
deep-seated grievances over economic deprivation.

Ethnic divisions are not racial. There were probably over a thousand
languages in Africa, and hence a thousand histories, traditions,
religions, legal systems, etc. etc. After all, it is a huge continent
– and all that unites people IS the experience of colonialism and
neo-colonialism. One could argue that the slave trade also united, but
then the trade to the North and East was very different from that
across the Atlantic.

Topics to be discussed include, (but not limited to) the following:
- The Northern Africa-Southern Africa Divide
- The Linguistic Divide
- The Class Divide
- The Ethnic Divide
- The Ideological-Political Divide
- The Gender and Sexuality Divides
- The Generational Divide
- The Religious Divides
- The Rural-Urban Divide
- The Afro-Pessimism-Afro-Optimism Divide
- The Continental Africa-Diaspora Africa Divide
- The Intellectual-Non-intellectual Divide
- The Elitism-Non-Elitism Divide
- The Global South-Global North Divide
- The Cold War Ideological Divide (the Soviet-East-American-West)
  Divide
- The Post-Cold War Divide(s)
- The slaver-raiders/sellers and the enslaved Divide
- The rhetoric (theory)/action (practice) Divide

Paper Abstract Submission
Abstracts of approximately 250 words for papers of 20 minutes
duration, and suggestions of panels consisting of 3 panelists each
are welcome and should be e-mailed, with a short bio-note (50 words)
contact address, and one to three keywords related to the area of
research to Dr. Charles Quist-Adade, [email protected], no later than
December 15, 2011, final notification of selection to be communicated
by February 15, 2012.   


Contact:

Charles Quist-Adade, PhD
Department of Sociology
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
12666 72nd Avenue
Surrey, BC V3W 2M8
Canada
Phone: +1 604 599-3075
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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