E: huma@uct.ac.za
Event Venues:
- Day 1: Tuesday 12 September 2023 - Institute for Post-School Studies, University of the Western Cape
- Day 2: Wednesday 13 September 2023 - HUMA - Institute for Humanities in Africa, University of Cape Town
- Day 3: Thursday 14 September 2023 - Stellenbosch University
A copy of the Program:
Book of Abstracts:
Registration: Please register for the event here
A word from the convenors:
A ‘global’ model currently shapes our imagination of universities in the 21st century. This prototype responds to global trends in policy discourse and practices, including the embrace of Research Excellence Initiatives, University League Tables (rankings), Market-driven Funding Models (e.g., Cost-sharing), Climate change and other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In addition, there are growing concerns with Quality, Diversity, Employability, Decolonisation, and Emancipatory agendas. Against this backdrop, African universities are braced with existential challenges at regional and national levels. These universities have to negotiate their character between the pursuit of excellence and difficult political and economic conditions. In the convergence of global trends and local realities, the modern African university’s character and fabric emerge and gain specific forms.
Against this background, we are excited to welcome the second international conference on the theme “Negotiating the Fabric of the African University” to be held in Cape Town from 12 to 14 September 2023 at the University of the Western Cape (UWC), University of Cape Town (UCT), and University of Stellenbosch (SU). The program builds on a first conference, which took place in Maputo, Mozambique, and was also organized at three sites, namely, Eduardo Mondlane University, Joaquim Chissano University and Pedagogical University of Maputo. The conference in Cape Town is jointly organised by Patrício Langa and David Kaldewey with the assistance of colleagues from various institutions including the University of Bonn, (Lea Weigel, Berit Stoppa), Goethe-Institute Johannesburg (Philina Wittke), UWC (Seamus Needham, Ibrahim Harun, Nigel Prinsloo, Jamey Santon), and UCT (Divine Fuh).
The conferences are partially funded by the Volkswagen Foundation and aim to bring together selected scholars from different geo-epistemological locations and traditions, providing a unique opportunity for multiple academic and intercultural exchange, engagement and networking while reflecting on the character of the university in Africa. The 2023 edition is intended to consolidate the reflections started in Maputo last year as we re-examine and enquire into the global multilayered trends shaping and reshaping the fabric of the modern African university, including teaching and learning, research and innovation, engagement, outreach, and governance – with a renewed attention to emerging local models.
We hope the discussion will provoke some new foci for enquiry and help to understand more deeply the character of contemporary changes and (dis)continuities in the various African higher education settings. To do so, the salient sociological understanding of the university as a unified global cultural reference system will have to be interrogated and recalibrated. What are the peculiarities of African universities and how should they respond to the push for global standardisation? Finally, from a political standpoint, the conference aims to enrich the debate and strengthen the development of the higher education systems in which African universities are located.
We expect to unearth the defining and emerging features of the current university in Africa as we begin the second quarter of the millennium. We will examine the different lines of inquiry and understanding of African universities’ organisational, institutional, and systemic features.
Patrício Langa (University of the Western Cape) and David Kaldewey (University of Bonn)