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The African Studies Association (ASA) is a US-based association of scholars, students, practitioners, and institutions with an interest in the continent of Africa. Founded in 1957, the ASA is the leading organization of African Studies in North America , with a global membership of approximately 2000. [ 1 ]
African research and documentation : the journal of the African Studies Association of the UK and the Standing Commission [Conference] on Library Materials on Africa, Birmingham: African Studies Association of the United Kingdom, 1973, ISSN 0305-862X From 1973 to 2021. From volume 66 (1994), it was published by SCOLMA (Standing Conference on ...
Opening of the ECAS Conference 2019, McEwan Hall, University of Edinburgh.On stage from the left Mamadou Diouf (Columbia University), Thomas Molony (University of Edinburgh) and Amanda Hammar (AEGIS president, Centre of African Studies, Copenhagen).
The African Studies Association Italy (Italian: Associazione per gli Studi Africani in Italia, ASAI) is an Italian learned society of about 100 Africanists and is based both at the University of Urbino and Roma Tre University. [1] ASAI was founded in 2010 [2] and is an associated member of the AEGIS network of African studies centres in Europe. [3]
With some degree of interaction (e.g., collaboration, debate) with their African counterparts, by 1963, the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom (ASAUK) was founded, and by 1964, its first yearly conference was organized and attended.
It received a royal charter in 1935, becoming the Royal African Society (RAS). [2] Its current Royal Patron is Prince William, Duke of Cambridge. Its journal, originally Journal of the African Society, now African Affairs, has been in continuous publication since 1902. It is a peer-reviewed academic journal of political, economic and social ...
Since 2002 Clapham is a professor, now emeritus, based at the Centre of African Studies of Cambridge University. [1] [2] [3] He served as the editor of Journal of Modern African Studies from 1997 up to 2012. [3] [4] He was a president to the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom from 1992 to 1994. [5] [6]
The SSA emerged from the 1980 meeting of the African Studies Association, where three panels were independently organized on Sudan.The SSA's co-founders, Richard Lobban (the organization's first President) and Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, gathered the names of scholars interested in forming an Association for the study of Sudan.