Results for 'African nation'

994 found
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  1.  8
    How Should African Nations Draw Lessons from China's Development Experience?Li Zhibiao - 2008 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (1):56-72.
  2.  13
    The de-Africanisation of the African National Congress, Afrophobia in South Africa and the Limpopo River Fever.Malesela John Lamola - 2018 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 7 (3):72-93.
    This essay highlights the root causes of the pervasive discomfort with Africanness common among a significant portion of the South African population. It claims that this collective national psyche manifests as a dysfunctional self-identity, and is therefore akin to a psychosocial malaise we propose to name “the Limpopo River Fever”. The root cause of this pathological psycho-political culture, we venture to demonstrate, is the historical process of a systematic self-orientation away from Africa, perceived as “Africa north of the Limpopo (...)
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  3.  43
    Conservation and Wildlife Management in South African National Parks 1930s–1960s.Jane Carruthers - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (2):203 - 236.
    In recent decades conservation biology has achieved a high position among the sciences. This is certainly true of South Africa, a small country, but the third most biodiverse in the world. This article traces some aspects of the transformation of South African wildlife management during the 1930s to the 1960s from game reserves based on custodianship and the "balance of nature" into scientifically managed national parks with a philosophy of "command and control" or "management by intervention." In 1910 the (...)
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  4.  35
    Conservation and Wildlife Management in South African National Parks 1930s–1960s.Jane Carruthers - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (2):203-236.
    In recent decades conservation biology has achieved a high position among the sciences. This is certainly true of South Africa, a small country, but the third most biodiverse in the world. This article traces some aspects of the transformation of South African wildlife management during the 1930s to the 1960s from game reserves based on custodianship and the "balance of nature" into scientifically managed national parks with a philosophy of "command and control" or "management by intervention." In 1910 the (...)
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  5.  18
    Resisting the deficit model of development in Africa: Re-thinking through the making of an African national innovation system.Mammo Muchie - 2004 - Social Epistemology 18 (4):315 – 332.
    When in Africa we speak and dream of and work for, a rebirth of that continent as a full participant in the affairs of the world in the next century, we are deeply conscious of how dependent that is on the mobilisation and strengthening of the continent's resources of learning. Nelson Mandela Address at Harvard University, September, 1998 quoted in East African, September 1-7, 2003 A paradigm can, for that matter, even insulate the community from those socially important problems (...)
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  6.  5
    Resisting the deficit model of development in Africa: Re‐thinking through the making of an African national innovation system.Mammo Muchie - 2004 - Social Epistemology 18 (4):315-332.
    When in Africa we speak and dream of and work for, a rebirth of that continent as a full participant in the affairs of the world in the next century, we are deeply conscious of how dependent that is on the mobilisation and strengthening of the continent’s resources of learning. Nelson Mandela Address at Harvard University, September, 1998 quoted in East African, September 1–7, 2003A paradigm can, for that matter, even insulate the community from those socially important problems that (...)
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  7.  21
    Crisis, History and the Challenge of Reinvention in the Postcolonial: The African National Congress after Apartheid.Laurence Piper - 2014 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 61 (138):64-78.
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  8. The problem of governance in multiethnic African nations.Cletus Umezinwa - 2003 - In J. Obi Oguejiofor (ed.), Philosophy, Democracy, and Responsible Governance in Africa. Delta Publications. pp. 1--216.
     
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  9.  10
    Born to the Struggle, Learning to Write: An Interview with Lindiwe Mabuza, Poet and Chief Representative of the African National Congress in the United States.Elaine Maria Upton & Lindiwe Mabuza - 1995 - Feminist Studies 21 (3):615.
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  10. South African Higher Education: At the Center of a Cauldron of National Imaginations.Ahmed C. Bawa - 2012 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 79 (3):669-694.
     
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  11.  14
    "african Dream": The Imaginary Of Nation, Race, And Gender In South African Intercultural Dance.Smitha Radhakrishnan - 2003 - Feminist Studies 29:529-537.
  12.  23
    Relational African Values between Nations.Thaddeus Metz - 2019 - In Onditi Francis & Ben-Nun Gilad (eds.), Contemporary Africa in the New World Order. Indiana University Press. pp. 133-150.
    This chapter considers how some international ethical matters might be approached differently in the English-speaking literature if values salient in sub-Saharan Africa were taken seriously. Specifically, after pointing out how indigenous values in this part of the world tend to prescribe relating communally, this chapter articulates a moral-philosophical interpretation of communal relationship and brings out what such an ethic entails for certain aspects of globalization, political power, foreign relations, and criminal justice. The chapter suggests that the implications of a communal (...)
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  13. On African Homelands and Nation-States, Negritude, Assimilation, and African Socialism.L. Senghor - forthcoming - African Philosophy: A Classical Approach. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
  14.  85
    Status of national research bioethics committees in the WHO African region.Joses Kirigia, Charles Wambebe & Amido Baba-Moussa - 2005 - BMC Medical Ethics 6 (1):1-7.
    Background The Regional Committee for Africa of the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2001 expressed concern that some health-related studies undertaken in the Region were not subjected to any form of ethics review. In 2003, the study reported in this paper was conducted to determine which Member country did not have a national research ethics committee (REC) with a view to guiding the WHO Regional Office in developing practical strategies for supporting those countries. Methods This is a descriptive study. The (...)
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  15. On african homelands and nation-states, negritude, assimilation, and african socialism.Assimilation Negritude - forthcoming - African Philosophy: A Classical Approach.
     
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  16.  4
    Ethnocentrism and Nation. Reflection on Blocking Factors the Birth of the African Subject.Mbemba-Mpandzou Anselme - 2018 - Open Journal of Philosophy 8 (5):594-613.
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  17. Narrating the Nation : Murals and Tapestry in the Indian and South African Parliaments.Shirin Rai & Rachel Johnson - 2016 - In Arundhati Virmani (ed.), Political aesthetics: culture, critique and the everyday. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  18.  13
    Positioning as discursive struggle for equity: a critical discourse analysis of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) of African countries.Xufeng Zhu & Xin Shang - 2024 - Critical Discourse Studies 21 (2):218-233.
    Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are critical climate policy documents formulated by the Party countries, under the UNFCCC Paris Agreement, to communicate their goals and commitments to reduce national emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change. As an emerging discourse genre, it has attracted increasing attention from discourse analysts. However, few studies have specifically focused on the NDCs of African countries as a whole, leading into the situation in which their positions and voices are largely underrepresented in the (...)
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  19.  9
    The Portrayal of African Americans and Hispanics at National Council for the Social Studies Annual Meetings, 1997-2008.Jesus Garcia & Robert Madden - 2012 - Journal of Social Studies Research 36 (2):107-134.
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  20.  15
    Collective Memory and the Story of History: Lineage and Nation in a North African Oasis.Jocelyne Dakhlia - 1993 - History and Theory 32 (4):57-79.
    Collective memory is not always synonymous with tradition on the one hand or with the recollection of collective history on the other. The example of a South Tunisian oasis, located in a region with a strong tradition of literacy, shows a process of rupture with autochthonous history, a rupture based on the reappropriation of scholarly works of colonial administrators. Local memory is essentially based on the history of family and lineage origins, ideally founded on Shereefian ancestry, a genealogy going back (...)
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  21.  29
    Creating a New Society, New Nation and New Leadership Quality in Kenya through African Traditional Education Principles.Francis Xavier Gichuru - 2011 - Cultura 8 (1):111-126.
    The article is a bold extraction of the intangible cultural heritage (ICH) value of traditional African education, attempting to capture the essence of what education made a young person be when he/she qualified for marriage. At the marriage stage an adult was given the green light to become the head of a family and manager of a home, and permitted make all the decisions touching on the family and, at the same time, take care of the community and country (...)
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  22.  3
    African cities by 2063: Fostering theologies of urban citizenship.Stephan F. de Beer - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (4):11.
    Grounded in a postcolonial, liberationist urban vision, this article lamented the theological and political paralysis of urban denialism that fails African cities and African urban populations. Considering different possible urban trajectories towards 2063 – ranging from floundering to flourishing, implosion to explosion, and apocalyptic disaster to complete rebirth – it then proposed theologies of African urban citizenship, as response. It sought to articulate a vision of citizen-driven African cities, remaking cities ‘from below’, through interconnected and intersectional (...)
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  23. Myths and realities of higher education as a vehicle for nation building in developing countries: the culture of the university and the new African Diaspora.Seth A. Agbo - 2005 - In David Seth Preston (ed.), Contemporary issues in education. New York, NY: Rodopi.
  24.  6
    African virtue ethics traditions for business and management.Kemi Ogunyemi (ed.) - 2020 - Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.
    African nations are many and diverse, each one of them a multicultural home to philosophies that have enriched human communities over the centuries. Yet, the continent's wisdom remains largely undocumented. Of particular importance are those insights that could serve as stimuli to the more responsible and sustainable management of the global economy and the earth's resources. African philosophies about the way to live a flourishing life are predominantly virtue-oriented. However, narratives of African conceptions of virtue are uncommon. (...)
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  25.  13
    Communicating Progress on Meeting the United Nations Global Compact Goals – an analysis of the South African experience.Daniel Malan - 2017 - African Journal of Business Ethics 11 (2).
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  26.  15
    The African Renaissance as a reversal of conquest expressed in naming: An Afrocentric engagement.Simphiwe Sesanti - 2018 - South African Journal of Philosophy 37 (4):502-514.
    The African Renaissance is historically an African revolutionary project aimed at reclaiming and reviving African heritage that was destroyed by European slavery and colonialism. One of the manifestations of the African Renaissance was to do away with European names imposed on African countries, and to replace them with African names. While this was a good move, it was a half-measure because it ignored the gender aspect of colonial naming which saw a European cultural legacy (...)
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  27.  34
    Class, Social Movements and the Transformation of the South-African Left in the Crisis of 'National Liberation'.Franco Barchiesi - 2004 - Historical Materialism 12 (4):327-353.
  28. Philosophy and an African culture.Kwasi Wiredu - 1980 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    What can philosophy contribute to African culture? What can it draw from it? Could there be a truly African philosophy that goes beyond traditional folk thought? Kwasi Wiredu tries in these essays to define and demonstrate a role for contemporary African philosophers which is distinctive but by no means parochial. He shows how they can assimilate the advances of analytical philosophy and apply them to the general social and intellectual changes associated with 'modernisation' and the transition to (...)
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  29.  26
    National ethics guidance in Sub-Saharan Africa on the collection and use of human biological specimens: a systematic review.Francis Barchi & Madison T. Little - 2016 - BMC Medical Ethics 17 (1):64.
    BackgroundEthical and regulatory guidance on the collection and use of human biospecimens for research forms an essential component of national health systems in Sub-Saharan Africa, where rapid advances in genetic- and genomic-based technologies are fueling clinical trials involving HBS and the establishment of large-scale biobanks.MethodsAn extensive multi-level search for publicly available ethics regulatory guidance was conducted for each SSA country. A second review documented active trials listed in the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform as of January 2015 in which (...)
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  30.  62
    African Philosophy of Management in the Context of African Traditional Cultures and Organisational Culture: The Case of Kenya and Tanzania.Gido Mapunda - 2013 - Philosophy of Management 12 (2):9-22.
    Despite the fact that management programmes provided by African universities are based on Western ontology, there exists a philosophy of management that is uniquely African. It is necessary to discover, understand and nurture this philosophy in order to explain why African managers behave in the ways they do. The African philosophy of management is premised on African traditional cultures, which have a strong influence on the organisational culture of African organisations. For example, despite many (...)
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  31.  19
    African Ethics and Online Communities: An Argument for a Virtual Communitarianism.Stephen Nkansah Morgan & Beatrice Okyere-Manu - 2021 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 10 (3):103-118.
    A virtual community is generally described as a group of people with shared interests, ideas, and goals in a particular digital group or virtual platform. Virtual communities have become ubiquitous in recent times, and almost everyone belongs to one or multiple virtual communities. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, with its associated national lockdowns, has made virtual communities more essential and a necessary part of our daily lives, whether for work and business, educational purposes or keeping in touch with friends (...)
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  32.  23
    The benefits and dangers for churches and ministry institutions to work in a regulated environment, with reference to professionalising religious practice via South African Qualifications Authority and the National Qualifications Framework Act.Graham A. Duncan - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (4):1-13.
    Since 1994 and the coming of democracy to South Africa there has been a concerted attempt to develop a coherent, unified educational system that will redress the inequities of the apartheid systems. Significant to this ongoing process is the field of higher education, where relevant legislation has been enacted in order to bring coherence and consistency to the education system in the public and private sectors. Significant issues have arisen with regard to the provision made by private religious educational institutions, (...)
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  33. African Environmental Ethics, Indigenous Knowledge, and Environmental Challenges.Workineh Kelbessa - 2015 - Environmental Ethics 37 (4):387-410.
    Unlike mainstream Western ethics, African environmental ethics has recognized the inter­connectedness and interdependence of all beings and the more-than-human world. To be an object of moral concern, rationality, intelligence, and language are not required, although different beings have different mental capacities and roles. The unity of the whole estab­lishes an ethical obligation for human beings toward nature. Africa has different cultures that have helped to shape positive moral attitudes toward the natural environment and its human and nonhuman components. Although (...)
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  34.  8
    Africanizing Science in Post-colonial Kenya: Long-Term Field Research in the Amboseli Ecosystem, 1963–1989.Amanda E. Lewis - 2018 - Journal of the History of Biology 51 (3):535-562.
    Following Kenya’s independence in 1963, scientists converged on an ecologically sensitive area in southern Kenya on the northern slope of Mt. Kilimanjaro called Amboseli. This region is the homeland of the Ilkisongo Maasai who grazed this ecosystem along with the wildlife of interest to the scientists. Biologists saw opportunities to study this complex community, an environment rich in biological diversity. The Amboseli landscape proved to be fertile ground for testing new methods and lines of inquiry in the biological sciences that (...)
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  35.  8
    African women entrepreneurs and COVID-19: Towards achieving the African Union Agenda 2063.Emem O. Anwana & Oluwasegun J. Aroba - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (2):7.
    Research on the challenges facing African women entrepreneurship and the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is scant. This article explored the challenges and the impact of COVID-19 on African women-owned businesses and the effect thereof on the 17th goal of the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063. African women entrepreneurs experience many social inequalities, ranging from cultural norms to family to legal and regulatory measures to accessing finance. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated these challenges as (...)
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  36.  7
    African female doctoral graduates account for success in their doctoral journeys.Lifutso Tsephe & Cheryl Potgieter - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (1):9.
    Doctoral education is regarded as a crucial engine for development by the knowledge economies, thereby making the research capacity of scholars play a critical factor towards development. Widening participation within doctoral education is seen as a way of enhancing this capacity. However, African scholars produce only 1.4% of all published research, indicating that Africa lacks research capacity. Even though both men and women contribute to the development of their continent and their countries, the number of women holding doctoral degrees (...)
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  37.  22
    African Conceptions of Age‐Based Moral Standing: Anchoring Values to Regional Realities.Nancy S. Jecker - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (2):35-43.
    Is age discrimination ethically objectionable? One puzzle is that we sometimes assume that the target of both age discrimination and ageism must be older people, yet in poorer nations, older people are generally shown more respect. This article explores the ethical question. It looks first at ethical arguments favoring age discrimination toward younger people in low‐income, less industrialized countries of the global South, using sub‐Saharan Africa as an illustration. It contrasts these with arguments favoring age discrimination toward older people in (...)
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  38.  3
    African Voices: in search of a decolonial turn.Siphamandla Zondi (ed.) - 2021 - Pretoria, South Africa: Africa institute of South Africa.
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  39.  16
    Enhancing African Development through Freedom: An Assessment of Dukor's Philosophical Basis of African Freedom.Chuka A. Okoye - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):155.
    The African continent has long suffered serious developmental relapse in a continually developing world. Lots of thinkers indeed term most of these African states“failed states”. One sees that that while many other nations of the world develop and as such interact conveniently in this global village, most African nations come merely as beggars in the global village having nothing to offer but begging for an opportunity for consumption. These nations therefore remain stagnated and continually retrogressive in all (...)
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  40.  17
    The changing faces of African Independent Churches as development actors across borders.Babatunde A. Adedibu - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (1):9.
    The religious transnationalism evident in the 21st century has heralded a new paradigm of religion ‘made to travel’ as adherents of religions navigate various cultural frontiers within Africa, Europe and North America. The role of Africa in shaping the global religious landscape, particularly the Christian tradition, designates the continent as one of the major actors of the Christian faith in the 21st century. The inability of European Christianity to address most of the existential realities of Africans and the stigmatisation of (...)
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  41.  8
    South African Social Science and the Azanian Philosophical Tradition.Anjuli Webster - 2021 - Theoria 68 (168):111-135.
    This article discusses the contemporary history of South African social science in relation to the Azanian Philosophical Tradition. It is addressed directly to white scholars, urging introspection with regard to the ethical question of epistemic justice in relation to the evolution of the social sciences in conqueror South Africa. I consider the establishment of the professional social sciences at South African universities in the early twentieth century as a central part of the epistemic project of conqueror South Africa. (...)
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  42.  14
    African Philosophers.W. Emmanuel Abraham, Olúfémi Táíwò, D. A. Masolo, F. Abiola Irele & Claude Sumner - 2017 - In Robert L. Arrington (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophers. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 1–38.
    Anton Wilhelm Rudolph Amo (1703–c. 1759 ce), philosopher and physician, was born at Axim, Ghana, and died at Fort Chama, Ghana. When he was four years old, the Dutch West Indies Company's preacher in Ghana sent him to Holland to be baptized and educated in the Bible for future service in Ghana. However, the Company headquarters, undesirous of any interference with its lucrative trade in slaves, turned little Amo over to the German Duke Anton Ulric‐Wolfenbuttel.
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  43.  31
    Fraud and the african renaissance.Christine Gichure - 2000 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 9 (4):236–247.
    Forensic studies have identified fraud as a major factor that hampers Africa’s economic development. This paper first establishes a link between fraud and the ideal of the African Renaissance. It then gives an overview of the extent of fraud in Africa by discussing the findings of a recent forensic survey on fraud in Africa. Against this backdrop it is then argued that what is needed to turn the tide of fraud in Africa is a transvaluation of loyalties to include (...)
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  44.  11
    Fraud and the African Renaissance.Christine Gichure - 2000 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 9 (4):236-247.
    Forensic studies have identified fraud as a major factor that hampers Africa’s economic development. This paper first establishes a link between fraud and the ideal of the African Renaissance. It then gives an overview of the extent of fraud in Africa by discussing the findings of a recent forensic survey on fraud in Africa. Against this backdrop it is then argued that what is needed to turn the tide of fraud in Africa is a transvaluation of loyalties to include (...)
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  45.  23
    L'éclatement de la nation sud-africaine minée par la mondialisation.Franco Barchiesi - 2002 - Multitudes 3 (3):35-52.
    This article discusses changes in post-apartheid South Africa’s economy and society in relation to the country’s re-insertion in the Empire. South Africa ’s specificity in the African context is largely related to the crucial role played in this case by the factory proletariat in defining the collapse of apartheid. Therefore, neoliberalism and the entry in the Empire in this case have to be understood in terms of state responses to a class composition that starting from workplace organisation has expressed (...)
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  46.  30
    Godly Nations.Tabish Khair - 2001 - Radical Philosophy Review 4 (1-2):229-246.
    Engaging, among others, with Benedict Anderson’s seminal study of “imagined communities,” this paper argues that nationalism comes into being with the rise of a Capitalist market and the ensuing competition, immediate or in due course, between the internal lregional and the extemal/interregional capitalists. The logic of nationalism is defined as being numerical, racial and linguistic, but the focus is removed from language as an emblem of nationhood and put on the dialectical workings of Capitalism. In the process, the paper attempts (...)
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  47.  3
    Godly Nations.Tabish Khair - 2001 - Radical Philosophy Review 4 (1-2):229-246.
    Engaging, among others, with Benedict Anderson’s seminal study of “imagined communities,” this paper argues that nationalism comes into being with the rise of a Capitalist market and the ensuing competition, immediate or in due course, between the internal lregional and the extemal/interregional capitalists. The logic of nationalism is defined as being numerical, racial and linguistic, but the focus is removed from language as an emblem of nationhood and put on the dialectical workings of Capitalism. In the process, the paper attempts (...)
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  48. Constructing an Authentic Self: The challenges and promise of African-centered pedagogy.Michael Merry - 2008 - American Journal of Education 115 (1):35-64.
    Notwithstanding its many successes, African-centred pedagogy (ACP) has been vulnerable to criticism, implicit and explicit, from several quarters. For example, ACP can be justly criticized for not recognizing the general diversity of blacks in America, a “nation” of more than 30 million spread across a tremendous variety of lifeways, locations, and historical circumstances. It also has been accused of abandoning the democratic purposes of the civil rights movement and repudiating its real successes. In addition to the ambiguities of (...)
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  49.  33
    Review of Marybeth Gasman and Louis W. Sullivan, The Morehouse Mystique: Becoming a Doctor at the Nation's Newest African American Medical School 1. [REVIEW]Rana Asali Hogarth - 2012 - American Journal of Bioethics 12 (11):51-52.
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  50.  5
    Alcohol abuse in African traditional religion: Education and enlightenment as panacea for integration and development.Emeka C. Ekeke & Elizabeth O. John - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (2):8.
    Alcoholism is endemic in Nigeria’s traditional religion and society. This abuse is especially common at New Yam festivals, Ekpe, Ekpo and Nmanwu masquerades festivals, burial rituals, birth, marriage and naming ceremonies. Some claim that this is driven by specific beliefs and activities in African culture, such as beliefs in ancestors, libation, hospitality and entertaining guests and strangers and the desire to maintain the cultural traditions of the ancestors. Alcohol abuse has generated major health and social issues for abusers, their (...)
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