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What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR

Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011.

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Main Author: Fourie, Mieke
Other Authors: Smith, Karen
Format: Thesis
Language:en_ZA
Published: Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch 2011
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fourie, Mieke
author2 Smith, Karen
author_browse Fourie, Mieke
Smith, Karen
author_facet Smith, Karen
Fourie, Mieke
author_sort Fourie, Mieke
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv University of Stellenbosch
description Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011.
format Thesis
id oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/6644
institution Stellenbosch University (South Africa)
language en_ZA
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:44:05.289Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
publishDate 2011
publishDateRange 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
publisherStr Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
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source_str SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
spelling oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/6644 What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR Fourie, Mieke Smith, Karen University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Political Science. Scholarship Africa/Africanist Intellectual hegemony International relations Theses -- Political science Dissertations -- Political science Africa -- Intellectual life -- 21st century Communication and technology -- Africa International relations -- Publishing -- Africa Political Science Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Despite the validity of arguments highlighting the inadequacy of existing theories to explain Third World and specifically African realities, criticism has perpetuated, rather than disarmed, status quo theories. This is because focus on (and thus within) the existing conceptual framework has impeded vision beyond these barriers, thereby hampering the formation of new, more applicable theories. The intellectual balance of power and methodological hegemony of the West is perpetuated, on the African continent through Western monopoly over course content in tertiary education as well as the preferences of publishers for Africanist rather than African contributions. This study provides a critical assessment of scholarly dominance on the topic of Africa in order contribute to a greater understanding of the dynamics acting to exclude non-Western ideas and experiences from the IR narrative. The study provides a content analysis of 25 peer-rated influential journals publishing IR content for the period January 2000 to August 2010. The aim was to identify dominant themes and scholars on the topic of Africa in IR. General biographical information on the five highest ranking scholars in terms of publication exposure was gathered in order to assess networks of academic and professional affiliation that could have contributed to their publishing success. Dominant themes vary between African, Third World and international-oriented journals. Governance is a prevalent theme throughout, but African journals prefer intervention to the international journals’ preoccupation with conflict in Africa. Third World Journals place development first. The five most prolific authors are Ian Taylor, Kevin C. Dunn, Cameron G. Thies, Nana K. Poku and Chris Alden. They are all currently lecturing at either American or British academic institutions and are all Africanists, save for Poku who is a diasporic African. Networks of affiliation are established through institutions of higher education primarily and through societal memberships. The internet does not seem to be an important tool of networking amongst Africanists. Dominant authors tend to collaborate, serve as article reviewers or on editorial boards of journals for which they also submit articles, and as research grant proposal reviewers, thus also constituting the gatekeepers in academia. AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Ten spyte van geldige argumente wat aanvoer dat bestaande teorieë nie in staat is daartoe om Derdewêreld ervarings – spesifiek dié van Afrika – genoegsaam te begryp nie, het kritiek eerder hierdie teorieë versterk as ontsetel. Dit is omdat fokus op (en dus vanuit) bestaande teoretiese raamwerke die oorweging van elemente buite hierdie raamwerke onmoontlik maak, en sodoende die ontstaan van nuwe, meer verteenwoordigende raamwerke, teenwerk. Die intellektuele magsbalans en metodologiese hegemonie van die Weste word voortgesit, selfs op die Afrika kontinent, deur Westerse monopolie oor die kursusinhoude van tersiêre instansies, sowel as deur die voorkeur wat Afrikaniste se bydraes geniet bo dié van Afrikane vir publikasie. Hierdie studie bied ‘n kritiese analise van dominansie in kundigheid oor die onderwerp van Afrika om sodoende by te dra tot ‘n meer omskrywende geheelbeeld van die dinamiek wat nie-Westerse idees en ervarings uitsluit tot die diskoers van Internasionale Betrekkinge. Die navorsing is in die vorm van ‘n inhoudsanalise van 25 invloedryke joernale wat inhoud relevant tot Internasionale Betrekkinge publiseer, vir die periode Januarie 2000 tot Augustus 2010. Die doel is om dominante temas en kundiges oor die onderwerp van Afrika se internasionale betrekkinge te identifiseer. Biografiese inligting oor die vyf mees bedrewe kundiges in terme van publikasies is ingesamel om die netwerke van akademiese en professionele affiliasie wat moontlik tot hulle status kon bydra, te assesseer. Dominante temas verskil tussen Afrika-, Derdewêreld- en internasionaal-georiënteerde joernale. Regeerkunde is deurgaans ‘n prominente tema, maar die Afrika-joernale verkies intervensie teenoor die internasionale joernale se fokus op konflik in Afrika. Derdewêreld-joernale plaas meer klem op ontwikkeling. Die vyf mees bedrewe outeurs is Ian Taylor, Kevin C. Dunn, Cameron G. Thies, Nana K. Poku en Chris Alden. Hulle is almal lektore by Amerikaanse of Britse akademiese instansies en, behalwe vir Poku wat deel van die Afrika diaspora vorm, is hulle almal Afrikaniste. Netwerke van affiliasie word deur instansies van hoër opleiding of lidmaatskap aan professionele assosiasies bewerkstellig. Die internet is klaarblyklik nie ‘n baie belangrik instrument in kontakbouing vir Afrikaniste nie. Dominante outeurs is geneig om saam te skryf, hulle is dikwels die artikelkeurders vir joernale of dien op die redaksie en tree ook dikwels in ‘n hoedanigheid van keurders van navorsingsbefondsing op. As sulks is hulle gelyk die dominante akademici as die waghonde van die ivoortoring. Masters 2011-02-07T02:13:38Z 2011-03-14T08:27:16Z 2011-02-07T02:13:38Z 2011-03-14T08:27:16Z 2011-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/6644 en_ZA University of Stellenbosch xi, 127 p. : ill. application/pdf Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
spellingShingle Scholarship
Africa/Africanist
Intellectual hegemony
International relations
Theses -- Political science
Dissertations -- Political science
Africa -- Intellectual life -- 21st century
Communication and technology -- Africa
International relations -- Publishing -- Africa
Political Science
Fourie, Mieke
What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title_full What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title_fullStr What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title_full_unstemmed What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title_short What African voice? The politics of publishing Africa in IR
title_sort what african voice the politics of publishing africa in ir
topic Scholarship
Africa/Africanist
Intellectual hegemony
International relations
Theses -- Political science
Dissertations -- Political science
Africa -- Intellectual life -- 21st century
Communication and technology -- Africa
International relations -- Publishing -- Africa
Political Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/6644
work_keys_str_mv AT fouriemieke whatafricanvoicethepoliticsofpublishingafricainir