About the conference

CAMRI Racism, Ethnicity and the Media in Africa Conference

Draft Programme

Organised by the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), a member of the Africa Media Centre, University of Westminster

Keynote speaker:
Francis B. Nyamnjoh, Professor of Anthropology, University of Cape Town
Topic: ‘Africa’s Media: Between Professional Ethics and Cultural Belonging’

Start date: Thursday 25 March 2010
End date: Friday 26 March 2010

Venue: 115 New Cavendish Street, London W1W 6UW

Racism, Ethnicity and the Media in Africa is a 2-day interdisciplinary CAMRI conference to be held at the Cavendish Campus, University of Westminster from 25-26 March 2010. Not only are the concepts and practices of racism and ethnicity related and multifaceted – covering issues such as race, sex, colour, status and class – but they are also part of multi-staged pre-colonial, colonial and postcolonial realities. The crisis in global capitalism, rising levels of poverty in Africa, together with political mismanagement, appear to be fuelling unprecedented levels of racial and ethnic conflict on the continent. This debate matters because racism and ethnicity have, to a large extent, undermined African efforts that aim to achieve national unity and development. The Nigerian-Biafran War, 6 July 1967 – 15 January 1970, serves as a prominent example. More recent examples include Rwanda, where, in 1994, RTML radio played a leading role in the massacre of millions of Rwandans. In December, 2007, Kenyan media reports and songs,
during what many regarded as ethnic-divided elections, contributed to the violent clashes that killed 900 and displaced more than a quarter of a million people. The ethnic and racial killings in Darfur, the murder of albinos in Tanzania, the 2008 xenophobic attacks in South Africa and many other unreported conflicts in Africa raise many questions: How are the mass media implicated in the growing ethnic and racial conflicts and violence in Africa?  In what ways are the media challenging, undermining or reinforcing issues relating to racism and ethnicity in Africa?  How have African media and journalists covered racial and ethnic topics?  Both old and new media have opened new spaces for debates that were formerly suppressed, but have they not also encouraged extremism?

Speakers include:
Adamu Ladi Sandra, Ahmadu Bello University, Nigeria
Armijo Enrique, Attorney, Washington, USA
Azungi Dralega Carol, Western Norway Research Institute, Norway
Baffour Ankomah – New African, IC Publications, UK
Bedu-Addo Kobina Ano, Ghana Institute of Journalism, Ghana
Cabedoche Bertrand, Gresec, Université Stendhal Grenoble3,  France
Esan Oluyinka, University of Winchester, UK
Frere Marie-Soleil, University of Brussels, Belgium
Gachiri Albert – News Editor of NTV, Kenya
Lekgoathi, Sekibakiba Peter – University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Mogera Solomon – BBC Head of Swahili Desk, UK
Mwendo Lilian – Kenyan Television Journalist (KBC), Kenya
Nassanga Goretti Linda, Makerere University, Uganda
Noetzold Katharina – CAMRI, University of Westminster
Omenugha Kate Azuka, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Nigeria
Piela Anna  – CAMRI, University of Westminster
Rodny-Gumede Ylva, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Roza Tsagarousianou – CAMRI, University of Westminster
Sakina Datoo – Chairperson – Tanzania Editors Forum, Tanzania
Salawu Abiodun, University of Fort Hare, South Africa
Seaton Jean – CAMRI, University of Westminster
Simões de Araújo Caio, University of Coimbra/ University of the State of
Sao Paulo, Brazil
Simutanyi Neo, Centre for Policy Dialogue, Zambia
Sithole Innocent Chofamba – Ex-Editor, The Mirror (Zimbabwe)
Thussu Kishani Daya – CAMRI, University of Westminster
Xin Xin – CAMRI, University of Westminster

How to attend
To register, click here:

http://www.westminster.ac.uk/schools/media/news-and-events/events/2010/racism,-ethnicity-and-the-media-in-africa

To register please download form from here
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/schools/media/news-and-events/events/2010/racism,-ethnicity-and-the-media-in-africa
and return it with payment to Helen Cohen (H.cohen02@westminster.ac.uk) or

post it to:

Conference Administrator, Room FG-03, University of
Westminster, Watford Road, Northwick Park,  Harrow, Middlesex HA1 3TP
England or by FAX: +44 (0) 20 7911 5995 . Phone No +44 (0) 20 7911 5000
Ext 4298.

The September 2009 Newsletter of the African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter is now available online at: http://www.diaspora.uiuc.edu/newsletter.html

September’s newsletter features

  • articles
  • news reports and announcements;
  • a compiled list of recent dissertations in archaeology and history;
  • and book and film reviews by Paula Saunders, Ivor Miller, and Tobias Green.

Please contact Christopher Fennell, University of Illinois cfennell@illinois.edu if you have essays, analysis papers, book reviews, project reports, announcements, or news updates that you’d like to contribute to the African Diaspora Archaeology Network and Newsletter.

This Newsletter is published quarterly, in March, June, September, and December.

*******

September 2009 Newsletter Table of Contents

** Articles, Essays, and Reports **

Landscapes of Cultivation: Inland Rice Fields as Landscapes and Archaeological Sites, by Andrew Agha and Charles F. Philips, Jr.

Looking East: Muslim Identity in the Archaeological Record of American Enslavement, by Kacie Allen

Stabilization and Tourism at the Gambia River’s Atlantic Trade Sites: The James Island Conservation and Survey Project, by Liza Gijanto

A New Approach to Identifying the African Origins of Enslaved Laborers Using Isotope Analysis of Archaeological Skeletal Remains, by Hannes Schroeder and Kristrina Shuler

Religion, Social Networks, and Temperance in New Philadelphia, Illinois, by Annelise Morris

“Smiling Faces, Beautiful Places” Stories of African Diaspora Relocation to the South, by Maggi M. Morehouse

** News and Announcements **

Recent Dissertations on Archaeology and History, by Christopher Fennell

Lewis Memorial Award to Richard Price’s Travels with Tooy

Douglass Prize to Annette Gordon-Reed

Historian Digs for Stories of Black Settlement and Its Massacre, by Audra D. S. Burch

Slave Route Museum Inaugurated in Matanzas, Cuba, by Hugo García

Grants Assist Historically Black Colleges and Universities to Repair Historic Buildings

IMLS 2009 Grants for African American History and Culture

New Books and Film: African Identity in Asia; Emancipation’s Diaspora; Paths to Freedom; Living History; Livestock, Sugar and Slavery; Nago Grandma and White Papa; Bloody Writing is for Ever Torn

** Conferences and Calls for Papers **

John Brown, Slavery, and the Legacies of Revolutionary Violence in Our Own Time

Scraping By: Wage Labor, Slavery, and Survival in Early Baltimore

43rd Annual Conference of the Society for Historical Archaeology

Race, Labor and Citizenship in the Post-Emancipation South

Impact of the Atlantic World on the “Old Worlds” in Europe and Africa

Portugal and Africa: Accounts, Connections, Identities

Preserving African Cultural Heritage

** Book and Film Reviews **

Review of “Archaeology of Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora,” by Paula Saunders

Review of “Herskovits at the Heart of Blackness,” by Ivor Miller

Review of “From Capture to Sale: The Portuguese Slave Trade to Spanish South America in the Early Seventeenth Century,” by Tobias Green

Suggested Books

AlterNative is announcing a general call for papers to be published in Volume 6, 2010. Call Deadline: 31-Dec-2009

About the journal

AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples is a multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal. It aims to present Indigenous worldviews from native Indigenous perspectives. It is dedicated to the analysis and dissemination of native Indigenous knowledge that uniquely belongs to cultural, traditional, tribal and aboriginal peoples as well as first nations, from around the world.

Submissions responding to this general call for papers should relate to  one or more of themes of the journal:

  • Origins
  • Place
  • Peoples
  • Community
  • Culture
  • Traditional and oral history
  • Heritage
  • Colonialism
  • Power
  • Intervention
  • Development
  • Self-determination

AlterNative particularly encourages Indigenous scholars to contribute submissions. Specialists and practitioners working on Indigenous issues  are also welcome.

Submission and Deadlines

AlterNative primarily publishes substantive articles (up to 7000 words) that address a particular indigenous topic or theme. Each article should include a 100 -150 word abstract. Please visit our website for complete author guidelines and our online submission portal.

We also publish short, timely commentaries (up to 3500 words) that address critical issues, reviews of Indigenous books and edited volumes, and we  aim to include one article published in a native language in each issue.  Please contact us directly if you are interested in authoring these types of  article.

We accept submissions throughout the year through our online portal; however, for consideration in our first general issue of 2010, articles should reach us no later than 31st December 2009.

For all the details, author, please visit our website http://www.alternative.ac.nz
Or contact us directly on editors@alternative.ac.nz

Please note: All submissions will be subject to our peer-review process.
The Editors retain the discretion at all stages of the publications  process to accept or reject an article.

About the Paper

Issues about symbolism in Africa always seem to raise interest. At the same time many have identified a crisis in cultural identity in Africa. In the seminar paper African Culture and Symbolism: A Rediscovery of the Seam of a Fragmented Identity Andrew Ifeanyi Isiguzo takes an interesting slant on it. He says:

My aim in this chapter is to examine African cultural identity crisis and find ways of healing it through symbols discovered in different African cultural setting. The focus is to discover the rallying point of African cultures first and then move towards relating the various African symbols to it. Many authors (African and Western) have had different strands about the pivot that swing the course of African identity. Some called it communalism, while others called it egalitarianism or paternalism. But none of these concepts can exclusively interpret African world view as found in religion, social life, language and art. We need a concept that embodies African community consciousness and solidarity, at the same time expresses African religion, politics and language. These are the gamut of African identity and any attempt at a retrieval or revivification of the culture in African symbols must consider these shades of African cultures.

How to get a copy

Read the full paper

Suggested Books

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