Thursday, February 6, 2014

Africa: Speaking Truth to Power Not Easy for African Think Tanks

Africa: Speaking Truth to Power Not Easy for African Think Tanks :


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At the opening of the first African Regional Think Tanks Summit in Irene, Pretoria earlier this week, renowned Cameroonian-born scholar Achille Mbembe described Africa as ‘the epicentre of global change.’


He added, however, that this is not fully acknowledged because of the way the continent is portrayed.


‘This [Africa] is where the most defining challenges of our times are being played out – sometimes with potentially global consequences and signification, and with increasing urgency,’ said Mbembe, a member of the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WISER) at the University of the Witwatersrand. Stereotypes continue to plague thinking about Africa.


‘African problems are persistently seen as problems that are happening elsewhere, from a place that is lagging behind,’ said Mbembe, who is known, among others, for his 2001 book On the Postcolony.


He proposes a ‘fundamental change of perspective,’ saying that researchers in Africa should not only focus on problem-solving, but also deliver critical analysis and interpretation that will be relevant to those most affected by policies. He describes this as, ‘Producing the kind of knowledge that gives a voice to the voiceless.’


So, who should produce this knowledge?


And to what extent can such knowledge be truly Africa-centred if donors from outside the continent fund so many African research institutions and think tanks?


On a continent rife with authoritarian regimes, the strengthening of think tanks – similar to the creation of independent media – is a high-stakes and highly political issue.



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