The Nordic Africa Institute – Publications

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  • 1.
    Bjarnesen, Jesper
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Back in Youth: Social Unbecoming in the Study of West African Masculinities2023In: Africa Spectrum, ISSN 0002-0397, E-ISSN 1868-6869, Vol. 58, no 3, p. 247-266Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    African youth became a central research theme in anthropology and related disciplines in the early 2000s, drawing renewed attention to the lives and aspirations of a segment of the continent's population that, since the independence era, has become increasingly demographically dominant but socially and politically marginalised. Reflecting on an extended case study of male ex-combatants in urban Burkina Faso, this paper offers a critical reading of the anthropological scholarship on African youth, emphasising, first, that much of this literature is most usefully read as studies of diverse (West) African masculinities and, second, that the literature has underplayed the extent to which achievements of social progression tend to be acutely reversible in contexts of precarity or radical social change, throwing the unfortunate, as it were, back in youth.

  • 2.
    Bjarnesen, Jesper
    et al.
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Boulton, Jack
    Institut für Ethnologie, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.
    Kovač, Uroš
    Faculty of Religion, Culture and Society, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
    Mbah, Ndubueze
    Department of History, The State University of New York, Buffalo, New York, USA.
    Whitehouse, Bruce
    Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA.
    Wyrod, Robert
    Department of Women and Gender Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA.
    Of Masks and Masculinities in Africa2023In: Africa Spectrum, ISSN 0002-0397, E-ISSN 1868-6869, Vol. 58, no 3, p. 191-200Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Contemporary forms of precarity, migration, connectivity, and sociality have transformed what it means to be a man in many African communities. Responding with agency and creativity to various incentives and constraints, Africans have adapted practices pertaining to labour, marriage, and sexuality to the exigencies of modern life amid the impacts of European colonialism, rapid urban growth, economic hardship, and political conflict. Drawing upon ethnographic and historical research to study settings in East, West, and Southern Africa, the articles in this special issue review the social changes that have taken place regarding men's roles and assess prospects for the emergence of counter-hegemonic masculinities.

  • 3.
    Melber, Henning
    The Nordic Africa Institute.
    Africa's Middle Classes2022In: Africa Spectrum, ISSN 0002-0397, E-ISSN 1868-6869, Vol. 57, no 2, p. 204-219Article in journal (Refereed)
  • 4.
    Melber, Henning
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit. Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa; Centre for Gender and Africa Studies, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa; Institute for Commonwealth Studies/School for Advanced Study, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
    Colonialism, Land, Ethnicity, and Class: Namibia after the Second National Land Conference2019In: Africa Spectrum, ISSN 0002-0397, E-ISSN 1868-6869, Vol. 54, no 1, p. 73-86Article in journal (Refereed)
  • 5.
    Åkesson, Lisa
    The Nordic Africa Institute, African International Links. Department of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
    Making migrants responsible for development: Cape Verdean returnees and Northern migration policies2011In: Africa Spectrum, ISSN 0002-0397, E-ISSN 1868-6869, Vol. 46, no 1, p. 61-83Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    In recent years, there has been a surge of “Northern” policy documents concerned with increasing the positive effects of international migration in countries of origin. This article contrasts some basic assumptions in policies on migration, return and development with an anthropological study of Cape Verdean returnees, and it reveals some important disparities between the returnees’ experiences and the ideas underpinning policy documents. The article analyses the role returnees’ savings and skills play in local change in Cape Verde, and in particular it looks into entrepreneurial activities. This is related to a discussion of the conditions that must be fulfilled in order to make it possible for return migrants to contribute to positive social change. In conclusion, the article shows that structural conditions have a fundamental impact on individual migrants’ abilities to support development, a perspective often left out of contemporary policies.

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