Studying Africa in the Australian Capital Territory: Bureaucratisation, Disciplinisation and Projectisation

Date

2021

Authors

Abraham, Ibrahim
Weglarz, Rocco

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific

Abstract

This article analyses the experiences of scholars of Africa in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), advancing upon critical research on African Studies and contemporary academia. Drawing upon interviews with researchers, this article makes three arguments about the study of Africa in the ACT and Australia. Firstly, that universities have undergone bureaucratisation, altering the way researchers organise their working lives. Secondly, that the study of Africa in the ACT’s universities demonstrates disciplinisation such that researchers’ methodologies are more important to their identities and career trajectories than their regions of research. Finally, that research practices have undergone projectisation, with scholars increasingly employed on precarious contracts and periodically shifting their focus to or from Africa. It is argued that the African Studies paradigm and Africanist identity are inoperative in the ACT.

Description

Keywords

African Studies, area studies, Australian universities, precarity

Citation

Source

Australasian Review of African Studies

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until

2099-12-31