Utafiti: Journal of African Perspectives

 

Call for Papers: Utafiti is inviting you to submit your manuscript – any topic in the humanities - for consideration in the next issues.

 

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This journal promotes critical and worldly debates with Africa at the centre. 

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Published in association with the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA), Africa Futures features cutting-edge research that critically reflects on some of the big questions relevant to imagining Africa’s future as a place.

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Robin Attfield talks about how Africa finds itself vulnerable to drought but also the flooding of its coastline, among other untoward environmental effects of climate change and civil war.

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Economic setbacks, including delays to major investments in mining and agriculture, were compounded by violent reactions to anti-corruption efforts. The conclusions of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) appeared to threaten stability by sanctioning President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and key figures associated with the country's violent past. The global financial crisis forced badly-hit Arcelor Mittal to scale back investments in the country. Early in the year, the government declared a state of emergency in response to a plague of crop-destroying army worms. The prospects of implosion of dictatorship-wracked neighbouring Guinea remained a source of anxiety. By year's end, however, the government appeared to be gaining traction, and Sirleaf announced that she would stand for re-election in 2011. Violent crime, in particular gender violence and armed robbery, remained high despite desperate counter-measures and efforts, including the imposition of the death penalty for robbery and the work of the Special Court for trying rape the previous year. UNMIL (United Nations Mission in Liberia) stayed put with some 10,000 troops.