__________________________________________________

Call for Publications

Theme: The Quest for Academic Freedom in Africa
Subtitle: The Struggle Rages on
Publication: Edited Book
Date: August 2023
Deadline: 29.7.2022

__________________________________________________


Introduction

Academic freedom is the freedom to teach and research in any area
without constraint. In addition, academic freedom seems to require
something more; that society provides conditions in which new ideas
can be generated, nurtured, and freely exchanged. Currently, fourteen
of the fifty-five African countries make specific references or
explicitly recognise 'academic freedom' in their constitutions. In
most of these constitutions, 'academic freedom' is linked with
freedom of expression and incorporated in the chapter on fundamental
rights and freedoms. Although enshrined in the constitutions,
academics in most African countries have experienced infringement of
these freedoms in practice. As political and other hegemonic powers
and classes in Africa attempt to grapple with global and internal
politico-economic crises and good governance demands, intellectual
freedom often come under serious threats. As they attempt to stifle
active citizenry, repressive elements of the state often invoke
dictatorial strategies that put academics, research, teaching, and
learning at risk.

Academic freedom is essential for unadulterated teaching and
research, which informs development as intellectuals are important
catalysers for democratic consolidation and dispensation. For
instance, in 2021, Africa witnessed the deterioration of
democratisation by coups in Niger, Chad, Mali, Guinea and Sudan. In
Sudan, the academic community formed a vocal and prominent group as
part of civil society protests against the power grab. If left
unprotected and unguarded, these intellectual freedoms, especially in
Africa, will deteriorate and reverse gains made towards
democratisation. Yet scholarship on this critical subject seems
stagnant, scanty, and sporadic in Africa. This book project draws
from recent and past events that have infringed or promoted academic
freedom in Africa. It also seeks to leverage progress and strides in
protecting these freedoms in Africa. This book invites scholars from
various disciplines interested in the theme of academic freedom.


Themes

1. Concepts of intellectual freedom and popular protest in Africa
2. Academic freedoms and development in Africa
3. Popular resistance, rights, and public security
4. The active citizenry, civic duty, and academic freedom
5. Leadership styles, forms of organisations, and academic freedom
6. African moral theory and academic freedom
7. Academic freedom and growth of democracy in Africa
8. Indigenous knowledge systems and academic freedom in Africa
9. State practices and barriers to academic freedom
10. Literature and language associated with academic freedom in Africa


Submission Procedure

Scholars are invited to submit a 300-word abstract. Authors should
also include the title of the proposed chapter, author(s) name(s),
affiliation(s) and corresponding author's email address. All
submitted chapters will be double-blind peer-reviewed. Abstracts
should be submitted to:
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]


Important Dates

29th July 2022:
Abstract submission deadline

12th August 2022:
Notification of acceptance of abstracts

30th November 2022:
Draft Chapter Submission

15th March 2023:
Revised Chapter Submission

30th June 2023:
Final Chapter Submission

30th August 2023:
Publication of Book


Editors

Garton Kamchezera1
Faculty of Law, University of Malawi

Asiyati Chiweza
Faculty of Social Science, University of Malawi

Yamikani Ndasauka
Faculty of Humanities, University of Malawi


Garton Kamchedzera holds a PhD from Cambridge University, an LLM in
Law and Development from Warwick University, and an LLB (Hons) from
the University of Malawi. As a legal educationist and scholar, he has
taught at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels at the
Universities of Malawi, Cambridge, Warwick, and Ghent in Child
Rights, Family Law, The Law of Trusts, Property Law, Core Legal
Competences, Customary Law, Environmental Ethics, Civil Society and
Activism, Intellectual Property Law, and Research Methods. He has
researched and consulted in Botswana, Sierra Leone, Tanzania,
Zimbabwe, Malawi, Papua New Guinea, Ethiopia, Finland, Nicaragua,
Uganda, Liberia, Rwanda, Iraq, and Afghanistan. His publications
include Article 5: The Child's Right to Appropriate Direction and
Guidance (The Hague; Brill International, 2012) and Trust-based
Programming for Child Rights (Book due in 2022). He has been guest
editor of the East African Law Journal and is the current editor of
the Journal of Law and Social Justice.

Asiyati Chiweza is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Political and Administrative Studies at the University of Malawi. She
holds a PhD in Public Administration from Curtin University,
Australia, a Master of Public Administration degree from Dalhousie
University, Canada, and a Bachelor of Social Science degree from the
University of Malawi. She has served as a co-editor of Beyond
Impunity: New Directions for Governance in Malawi. She has also
authored several book chapters and journal articles, including
African Affairs, the Journal of African and Asian Studies, Journal of
Contemporary Management, Malawi Journal of Humanities, Development in
Practice and Public Administration and Development Alternatives. Her
main research interests and expertise are local governance and
development, gender and governance, and public sector ethics and
governance. 

Yamikani Ndasauka is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Philosophy at the University of Malawi. His research interests are in
philosophy, applied ethics and mental health. He is an active
researcher and has published extensively in international journals
and contributed book chapters to numerous books. In addition, he has
co-edited a book titled Addiction in South and East Africa:
Interdisciplinary Approaches. He is the current Editor-In-Chief for
the Journal of Humanities at the University of Malawi. Dr Ndasauka
holds a Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Science and
Technology of China, a Master of Research in Philosophy degree from
the University of East Anglia, a Master of Arts in Applied and
Professional Ethics degree from the University of Leeds and a
Bachelor's of Arts (Humanities) degree from the University of Malawi.






__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to