Sunday, March 4, 2018

The March edition of Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies

Greetings:

The March edition of Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies (www.jpanafrican.org) is online (open-access, no-cost), featuring: two interviews, a book review, an electronic book focused on the African centered paradigm, an ancestral tribute profiling the late Hugh Masekela, a guest editorial, a recent lecture synopsis on the  Ongoing Impact of Negritude via links between Aimé Césaire and Black Lives Matter, four announcements (African American Digital Humanities conference,  Angela Y. Davis Papers at Harvard University, etc.), an annotated list of 20 new books relevant to Africology, and 13 articles on the politics of genocide denial in Ethiopia, demystifying social economic predicaments of public health in Nigeria, audiences perceptions of informative programs at Jimma Fana FM 98.1 in Jimma, Ethiopia, postcolonial reading of contemporary African poetry, Ubuntu-inspired approach to enhancing organizational culture in rural Kenya, an analysis of Guyana's national grade six assessment, values in Nigerian literature, a critique of a previously A:JPAS published paper focused on modern African Women versus traditional African women in relationship to the African Renaissance, religious movements and lethal violence in Nigeria, the promises and perils of attempting an African centered institution in a public school system, a Diopian analysis of the symbolisms of the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa, reconstructing the social sciences and humanities for the advancement of the African Renaissance, and other content that explore the African ethos.