African Studies Association
46th Annual Meeting
October 30 - Nov 2, 2003
Boston, MA
THEME STATEMENT


THEME STATEMENT
SUB-THEMES
 
 


Youthful Africa in the 21st Century
Peter D. Little
University of Kentucky
National Program Chair


At the start of the new millennium Africa is the most ‘youthful’ continent in the world, with approximately 50 percent of its human population below the age of 18 years and a large proportion between the ages of 18 to 25 years.  At a time when northern European countries, Japan and other industrialized states are projected to lose population over the next decade, Africa confronts a very different scenario.  Despite devastating public health constraints, its population, especially its youth, is projected to grow.  While Africa’s youth often is portrayed in negative terms--violent, rebellious, and disrespectful of custom—they also represent the future of the continent. The AIDS pandemic, wars, and poverty have left large segments of the continent’s youth to fend for themselves, and with increasingly important but understated roles in many spheres of life.   The time is especially opportune for Africanists to reflect on the implications of this youthfulness from a range of disciplinary lenses, from art and music to sociology and anthropology to political science and economics.  By focusing on the implications of Africa’s youth for scholarship and practice, one can ask new questions of current paradigms and studies, as well as explore fresh ideas with promising intellectual and policy dividends.

Several traditional areas of research in African studies have strong legacies in the study of youth.  Geography and sociology, for example, have been concerned with the role of youth in African cities, particularly as it relates to violence and crime, migration, and economic adaptations.  The multifaceted process of urbanization suggests a range of important questions about youth and age generally.  The experiences of Africa’s urban growth, which now has the highest rates in the world, has taken a fundamentally different path than on other continents where urbanization has traditionally been associated with rapid industrialization.  African cities, instead have taken a different route, one dominated by the informal or ‘shadow’ economy that often accounts for more than 50 percent of urban employment with high levels of youth participation.  Urban residents are involved with petty trade, urban and peri-urban farming, and a range of small-scale enterprises and service-based activities.  Young migrants and refugees play increasingly important roles in Africa’s thriving urban informal sector. How have youth responded to Africa’s unprecedented recent rates of urbanization; have the new metropolitan areas of Africa afforded new social and economic opportunities or aggravated existing problems for the young? 

African politics is another area where the theme of youth is especially relevant, particularly in some of the continent’s weak states (Sierra Leone and Angola) and in places where democratic experiments recently have occurred.   The role of youth in political rebellion and resistance movements, as well as democratic elections is receiving increased attention but could benefit from additional focus.  Popular media often has concentrated on the political ‘negatives’--the gun-touting, youth militia (‘child soldiers’)--but the young play other, more constructive roles in political life.  Democratization movements that have affected political regimes from Mali in the west, to Tanzania in the east demonstrate the power of youth in political transitions and elections.  Even among the continent’s longest standing political regimes, such as in Kenya, the role of the next generation of leaders in politics (the so called ‘young Turks’ in Kenya’s case) is receiving considerable attention and confirms the political importance of age.  What are the implications of the continent’s youthful demographic patterns for Africa’s new democracies and political challenges? 

Music and the arts in general are other areas where the theme of youth is especially relevant.  With increased globalization and technological advances, African music, film and dance are taking on new hybrid forms that blend past and present in particularly creative ways.  Global influences are reflected in new expressions of 
 
 

 

African art and music, while African forces also help to shape cultural forms elsewhere in the world.  Congolese music and aspects of West African art, for example, are increasingly trans-national in nature and prevalent in cities throughout the world.  Youth are at the center of important transitions that are taking place in African art forms, some of which are not always viewed in positive terms. 

African youth also represent significant challenges as well as opportunities for social and economic development on the continent.  Development scholars and practitioners are forced to consider the social and economic implications of Africa’s youthfulness.  In terms of the HIV/AIDS crisis alone, youth are especially vulnerable not only because they are increasingly orphaned and left to fend for themselves, but they also are highly susceptible to the disease itself.  Recent evidence tragically points to alarmingly high rates of HIV infection among females ages 15-18 years, as well as heightened levels of vulnerability among upwardly mobile and educated males between ages 20 to 35 years. These categories represent some of the potentially most important groups for the continent’s future welfare.   Economists already are beginning to explore the development implications of the HIV/AIDS crisis for labor markets and human capital formation, which paradoxically project skilled labor shortages in some regions but chronic levels of unemployment in other areas.  Social workers, public health experts, and activists also are engaged in innovative ways in skills training, employment, and social programs for youth that have been so devastatingly affected by HIV/AIDS, war, and general impoverishment.  In areas of chronic conflict and insecurity, a generation(s) of youth have been left with few skills and education but significant psychological and social problems.  The development challenges of the continent increasingly must engage youth in meaningful programs and policies.

These are just a few of the many topics and disciplines that are concerned with and could benefit from an increased attention to the position of youth in Africa’s past, present, and future.  Other subjects and disciplines are equally relevant. A historian’s concern with youth-based independence struggles and resistance movements, a writer’s focus on the ‘young’ in African stories, a gender specialist interested in the intersection of age and gender, the environmentalist’s interest with ecology and population growth, and the diaspora scholar who wishes to understand youth in the new African diasporas all could contribute to panels that highlight Africa’s youthfulness. 
 

  • Not all panels and papers at the annual meeting, however, need to be concerned with the theme of youth.  The organizers will accommodate a range of different subjects and topics in African studies and welcome contributions not related to the youth theme.  We are particularly interested in papers and panels that explore the comparative perspectives of youth, drawing on experiences from Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East.  A panel that included a specialist from another world region where experiences may be similar or different from Africa’s, would be especially welcome.  Additionally contributions that explore the theoretical implications of youth from different disciplinary perspectives, as well as their applications in the African context would be appreciated.

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    SUB-THEMES

    A. Youth and Urban Space in Africa (Martin Murray, Binghamton University and Anne Pitcher, Colgate University)

    Whether they partake of the pleasures of urban hip-hop, form part of a vast diasporic trading network, or confront the dangers of drugs and unprotected sex, an increasing number of Africa’s youth are choosing the city over the countryside or deliberately straddling the rural-urban divide as they make their way into adulthood.  From Kampala to Johannesburg, young people are navigating the opportunities and difficulties of urban life in economically creative as well as socially destructive ways.  This section explores the symbols, strategies, and tools that youth employ to seek shelter, build self-esteem, make a living, and protect themselves physically and emotionally within and across diverse urban settings.  It asks:  To what extent does the built environment of the urban landscape frame the choices that particular young people make?  How are the different options that urban youth exercise influenced by gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and class? What will be the likely impact on urban social services and living spaces of the increasing number of youth who have joined gangs or contracted HIV/AIDS?  Alternatively, what mechanisms and modes have young people themselves adopted and adapted to confront the challenges of 21st century urbanism?  Have conflict mediation groups, training schemes, and the shadow economy mitigated some of the hardships that urban youth face?   We contend that the rising number of young people with a largely urban experience in their country of origin and beyond represents a significant cultural and political shift in Africa that merits considerable attention from scholars.  The organizers welcome papers and panels that explore urban-based topics from both disciplinary and inter-disciplinary perspectives and/or that address urban opportunities and challenges posed by African youth.

    B: B. Political Transitions, Democracy, and Youth in Africa (Cyril Daddieh, Providence College)
    Recent political transitions from authoritarian one-party and military rule to liberal democracies in Africa owed much of their impetus to the sustained challenges posed by Africa's youth. Students organized and kept up protest demonstrations against attacks on their academic freedoms, inadequate financial support for education, and against increased financial burdens on them and their families as a result of cost-recovery measures. They also focused public attention on corruption in government and the overall incompetence of office holders. Urban unemployed school leavers and dropouts were also easily mobilized to protest against their chronic unemployment and the high cost of living. In attempting to survive at the margins by joining armed gangs and engaging in banditry and other forms of anti-social behavior, they created insecurity for everybody. In a few celebrated cases, such as in Sierra Leone and Liberia, they joined rebel armies to fight incumbent regimes. 

    These myriad challenges posed by the youth were enough to discredit corrupt, authoritarian governments and to expose them as "lame leviathans" indeed. In short, Africa's youth provided much needed impetus for civilian political organizations and democratization movements. They contributed their organizational skills to new political parties, organized campaigns, mobilized potential voters, provided enthusiastic support to new leaders, and monitored elections to ensure that they were "free and fair". A number
    of Africa's youth have been brought into new democratic governments. What
    impact can they be expected to make in sustaining Africa's fledgling democracies and ensuring good governance in the 21st century? We seek panel proposals that address these and other pertinent issues regarding the role of youth in Africa's political transitions and prospects for democratic consolidation.
     

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    C: Youth and the Future of the Study of Philosophy and Religion in Africa (D.A. Masolo, University of Louisville)
    Most African nations have been independent from colonialism for just about forty years now, but African intellectuals, especially in the fields of religion and philosophy, have been writing for a decade longer. The general historical condition of their writing largely shaped the themes and style of their scholarship and writing. It was a period full of innovative thinking, one that significantly contributed to the emergence and growth of the twin disciplines of religion and philosophy as we know it in the context of African Studies today. Most visible in this quest at the time were the young African men entering training institutions for ecclesiastical service in the various denominations represented by the mission world of the day. They grew into men and scholars, and their work and testimony broke new paths and became the foundation for the study of African religions and philosophy.

    As the youth of the 1940s and 1950s moved aside into retirement or passed on, their heirs took the disciplines of religion and philosophy in new directions. Philosophy in particular has undergone a solid and increasing secularization.  It has embraced and joined other traditions in debating issues connecting philosophers across cultural and national boundaries because they aim at addressing broad and common issues emanating from similar experiences and aspirations in the political, social and moral domains, and from similar sentiments toward the impact of science and technology.

    At the 2001 ASA meetings in Houston, Texas, the Society for African Philosophy in North America (SAPINA) organized a session entitled “African philosophy and the reassessment of the postcolonial,” based on the widely held view that the postcolonial was a present that was fast vanishing. One reason for this disappearance is the fact that the demography of scholars of African philosophy and African religions was itself changing fast. The fields are transferring into the hands of a younger generation of scholars whose memory of the colonial discourse lacks the punch of direct experience that once informed the work of their predecessors. This generation of scholars are men and women, clerics and lay people, and largely young and liberal.  It is important, in light of these changes and of the transformations in African societies generally, to gauge the intellectual directions of the current and still growing new generation of African scholars who embody a global approach to issues and to the practice of philosophy, and to research in religion. 

    How can we make philosophy and religion relevant and meaningful to 21st. Century African youth in the face of apparently endless political instability and socio-economic decay?  What roles can Christianity, Islam, academic philosophy, and Indigenous African religious systems and Modes of thought play in addressing some of Africa's most vexing issues like AIDS and sexuality, poverty, social justice, and civil society? The questions indicate that there are multiple directions, especially but not solely in applied ethics, social and political philosophy, epistemology, and metaphysics, in which scholars in philosophy and religion can focus their attention to avert youth disillusionment in the new millennium.  This section aims at bringing together scholars who will address the characteristic differences, if any, in the themes, styles and theoretical content of current research in African philosophy and African religions as spearheaded by the younger, post-postcolonial generation.
     

    D: Environmental Change and Patterns in Africa (Roderick Neumann, Florida International University)
    What sort of environment will Africa’s youth inherit?  While the answer to this question is fundamental to the continent’s future, it must be a multifaceted one.  In cities, issues of sanitation, potable water, and pollution—and their health effects on youth—are key.  In rural areas, issues of resource access (including inter-generational conflicts), exposure to natural hazards, and agricultural development predominate.  In war-torn areas, sustainable systems of indigenous agriculture and resource management have been destroyed or displaced.  Can Africa’s youth rebuild them?  In areas of political stability, multinational corporations are investing in resource extraction activities at unprecedented rates.  A new generation of environmental scientists will be critical to the evaluation and regulation of extractive industries.  Will Africa’s youth receive the training needed for the task?  How will demographic changes from AIDS and other factors affect environmental management, from small communities to the level of the nation-state?  African youths are participants in new movements and organizations that link social justice and human rights to the environment.  Can Africa’s youth lead the way to a more democratic, just, and ecologically sustainable future?  National and individual debt is a key factor in environmental degradation.  How will the inherited burden of debt constrain the future environmental management options of today’s youth?  This section welcomes panels that address these and related issues and questions.  Lessons from history, youth-focused ethnographies, and the sociology of youth in environmental movements are only a few of the many possibilities.

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    E: Economic Development and Its Impact on Youth (Sisay Asefa, Western Michigan University)
     
    An important recent report, entitled "Can Africa Claim The 21St Century," identifies four related strategies for African development in the 21st Century: (1) Improving governance and resolving conflicts, (2) Investing in people, (3) Increasing competitiveness and diversifying economies, and (4) Reducing aid dependence and debt and strengthening partnerships.  Of the four strategies mentioned, investing in people is the most important and challenging and entails development programs for youth, particularly in the area of quality education, healthcare, and population planning.  Africa's human development problems that directly affect youth include lagging primary school enrollments, high child mortality, and endemic diseases- including HIV/AIDS and malaria-that impose costs on Africa at the rate of two times that of any other developing region. With a rapid rate of population growth, African economies need to grow at an annual economic growth rate of 5 to 7 percent to simply keep the level of poverty from rising. 

    Africa is also in the early stages of demographic transition.  With a growing school-age population, Africa's school enrollment ratio has been falling. It is the only region in the developing world where primary enrollment rates were lower in 1995 than in 1980. Africa is also faced with problem of health where one in five children dies before the age of five. Almost 90 percent of deaths are caused by a handful of infectious diseases: acute respiratory infections, diarrheal diseases, malaria, measles, and tuberculosis that kill mostly children and young adults. In spite of the earlier gains, life expectancy since 1990 has stagnated, and it has sharply declined in African countries with high prevalence of HIV/AIDS. 

    The purpose of this sub-theme is to provide a forum for papers and panels that examine the effects of economic development on African youth from various dimensions.  Papers are invited that analyze alternative development strategies and policy options and their impact on youth in Africa. Papers that address issues of human capital investment, such as improvements in education, health care, nutrition, and population planning and their impact on African youth, also are welcome.  Papers that involve case studies of specific countries and/or comparative studies, including comparison with other world regions, also are encouraged. 
     

    F: Youth and the African Diaspora (Linda Heywood, Howard University)

     
    Youth and the African Diaspora is a theme that touches the core of the experience of peoples of the African Diaspora.  Beginning with the enslavement process in Africa, young people made up the bulk of those who fought in the wars that provided millions of captives to slave markets in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and the Americas.  Young people also disproportionately fell prey to kidnappers, or entered the circuit of enslavement as a result of indebtedness of kin, and judicial and religious processes and entered the slave markets that supplied enslaved Africans to the Middle East, Europe and the Americas.  In the Diaspora, the actions of youth also stood out.  Whether serving as boat hands during the Middle Passage, as companions in the homes and harems of their enslavers, sold in bundles along with adults to make up quotas, or forced to work as child laborers in the plantations, mines, fisheries, and urban centers in the Americas, the Middle East, and Europe, young people endured the same horrors and exploitation as the adults.  Those who survived the several diseases that led to astounding infant and child mortality rates joined the adults in their rebellions and uprisings, learnt the new languages and culture that evolved in the Diaspora, and ensured the vitality of the African Diaspora
    communities.  From the end of slavery to the present, the youth of the African Diaspora continue to represent the strength and survival of African peoples outside of Africa.  This varied picture of youth in the African Diaspora opens up opportunities for papers on historical and well as contemporary issues.  Proposals can range from a focus on youth and enslavement in the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas, youth and resistance to slavery, urban youth and the African Diaspora, youth and religion in the Diaspora, youth and cultural innovations in the Diaspora, and youth and the remaking of the Atlantic Diaspora.  Proposals from all fields of study are welcome.

    G: Historical Narratives and Models for Africa (Dennis Cordell, Southern Methodist University)
    Youth are embedded in most of the historical narratives and models, both emic and etic, regarding how African societies have changed through time.  However, attention to the positions and roles of young men and young women in African societies in the past has often been obscured by the authority accorded older members of African societies and the high value assigned to children as symbols of the endurance and continuity of the family. Young men and young women, who are neither children nor have large numbers of children, are marginalized in most of our conceptualizations of the history of Africa. Panels and papers that explore the theme of youth in the thematic narratives common to all eras of African history are encouraged. For example, founding narratives, migration narratives, initiation narratives, narratives of war and conquest, slave stories, resistance tales, marriage narratives, and accounts of the founding of families almost all accord a prominent place to those men and women we would characterize as youth. The roles of youth are, of course, gendered in a variety of ways, and contributions that highlight these distinctions are important. The European and Muslim travel literatures have also contributed much to our “reconstructions” of African history before the colonial era, but most readings of these sources have not focused on youth. Papers that re-read these narratives with an eye to young women and men will undoubtedly offer new insights. Panels and papers that look at youth in the narratives of the colonial era—those recorded by Europeans which are now enshrined in colonial and missionary archives, as well as others recorded and/or published by African authors—will also have an impact on our conceptualization of the rise of modernity in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. After all, it was young men and women who went to colonial schools and churches, served in colonial armies, gave birth in colonial clinics and hospitals, and worked in wage labor. The same may, of course, be said for the place of youth in our narratives about, and models of, African societies after independence.

    Panels and papers in historical population studies that privilege the evolution and the size and composition of those cohorts of men and women that we call “youth” are welcome in this section. In addition, contributions that consider the ways that African societies in the past categorized youth and the evolution of these categorizations are essential to understand how young women and young men were situated in African societies before the contemporary period.  Comparative panels and papers are also encouraged, contributions that compare conceptualizations of youth and historical sources about them between African societies, between African societies and those of the Diaspora, and between African societies and societies in other parts of the world.  Finally, not all papers dealing with historical narratives and models need to consider the sub-theme. While contributions on youth are encouraged, others are, of course, welcome as well.
     

    H: Colonialism, Imperialism, and Youthful Resistance (Richard Waller, Bucknell University)

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    This theme offers the opportunity to revisit old topics, as well as to address new ones.  For example, what have been the roles of age-based organizations in African colonial history or what has been the role of youth culture in the post-colonial era?   The idea of ‘youth’ in African history should be interpreted broadly: that is, back into the pre-colonial past and forward into the post-colonial era, examining both change and continuity.  Half of Africa’s population is under fifteen.  Its “small wars” are increasingly fought by children, who are also a visible component of the “new poor”.  Yet Africa has never been an ageing continent.  How have communities coped in the long term with the disparity between youthful muscle and elderly wealth and authority; and are child soldiers really a new phenomenon?  The young become old, and that passage from youth to age reminds us that “youth” cannot stand alone, without reference to other states.  Generational tension has always been one of the motors of African history.  “Resistance”, then, covers more than the conventional “anti-colonial” forms, and it should be sensitive to the ways in which gender and class or wealth affect the construction of age and its passages.  We know that such issues were embedded both in early conquest and “resistance” and in nationalist movements, from the city boys of the CPP to the socially-defined “young delinquents” of Mau Mau, and in struggles within church and mosque.  Did colonialism and its contradictions act both as a catalyst and a site of youthful rebellion – for colonial rule began by backing the young against the old and ended in reverse?  The theme might be further extended to cover colonial regimes and settler communities, for they too had young men and women to place and placate.  This section welcomes contributions that address these and other historical issues and encompass both disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches.

    I: Agriculture, Food Security, and Rural Development (Christopher  Barrett, Cornell University)
    Africa is the only major region of the world in which the number of hungry persons, including children and adolescents, is widely predicted to increase over the coming quarter century.  Although rapid urbanization is fundamentally changing the face of Africa, African development continues to hinge on growth in opportunities and reduction in vulnerabilities in rural areas.  Agriculture remains the lifeblood of Africa, not only as a source of income for farmers, but also as a source of inputs to processing, manufacturing and retail businesses that account for most employment in towns, and as the source of food for growing urban populations that haven’t dependable, low cost access to imported foods, necessitating rapid growth in output per farmer if the food security of both urban and rural populations is to be assured.  The beginning of the 21st century has brought a resurgence of work on agricultural development strategies in Africa.  Some of these depend on recent advances in genetics that open up new possibilities in crop and livestock breeding.  Others emphasize continued liberalization of agricultural input and output markets or on innovations in smallholder organizations that might address real or perceived market failures.  Agricultural research and extension systems are being recast in many countries on the continent, with heightened attention paid to the integration of indigenous and western knowledge about agroecologies.  At the same time, many observers have emphasized the steady “deagrarianization” of rural Africa as nonfarm activities have become increasingly important to sustainable livelihood strategies.  This sub-theme welcomes proposals that explore contemporary challenges of agriculture, food security and rural development in Africa—for example, increasing agricultural productivity, reconciling poverty reduction, food security, and environmental protection objectives, stimulating nonfarm investment and employment, infrastructure development and the delivery of public goods and services to remote areas, and effective humanitarian response to droughts and other natural disasters--and employ a range of analytical approaches from across the disciplines. 
    J: Household, Community, and Rural Livelihoods (Lisa Cliggett, University of Kentucky)
    On a continent where the majority of the population lives in rural areas, rural livelihoods and the social groups that facilitate those livelihoods play key roles in understanding the African experience.  With the vast diversity across the continent, social groups – whether small nuclear families, extended kin groups with ethnic affiliations, clusters of co-operative households, or ethnically hybrid communities in migrant frontiers (to identify only a few) – fundamentally shape rural peoples opportunities and choices for making a living.  The ways people in rural Africa make a living also link to forces wielded by governments, global economic systems, and development groups.  The role of youth in rural livelihood becomes especially critical in light of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and the increasing burden placed on survivors – very often orphaned children.  Conversely, as the number of young infected with HIV/AIDS increases in rural areas, how do rural communities and economies cope?  This section invites papers and panels which help to illuminate the wide range of linkages between livelihoods and social groupings on the African continent, as well as research that brings together meaningful comparisons of different livelihood systems.  In particular, with attention to questions of a youthful Africa, we encourage presentations addressing the roles youth play in rural livelihoods – both through their domestic groupings, and outside of them.  Topics considered within this section might include community and household adaptations to changing environments, local agrarian systems, gender and age dynamics (within and beyond the domestic group) in livelihoods, and migration and mobility as an increasingly pervasive rural phenomenon.  All of the issues covered in this section benefit from examination through multidisciplinary lenses, and we welcome papers and panels that bring together a variety of disciplinary perspectives.

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    K: New Patterns of International Relations (John Harbeson, City University of New York)
     
    The section on New Patterns of International Relations welcomes proposals for papers and panels that address not only the influence of global political and economic processes on Africa but the significance and influence of African political, economic, and cultural processes and problems for the shape of international arenas.  "Global" and "International" patterns include not only worldwide contours but those of particular non-African regions, the African continent as a whole, and subregions within the continent.  Especially welcome will be proposals that test and explore the influence of African experience for contemporary theory, e.g. in the areas of international relations and international political economy.

    L: The Visual Culture of Youth in Africa and the Diaspora: Artists, Art Communities, and Changing Times (Karen E. Milbourne, University of Kentucky)
    The theme of youth in relation to the arts suggests topics that address art forms made by and for young people.  “Youth” might also be seen as a metaphoric principle for what is young, “new” in our discipline.  The field of African art is indeed a young one, and one filled with many young scholars, young artists, and young ideas.  Ideas of youth span the spectrum from creative objects of young people, to youth movements, and to the creative ideas of the “next” generation.  Panels in this section might address a wide range of issues and themes.  Inquiries into the art forms made and performed by Africa’s youth, like toys and children’s masquerades, are encouraged.  Participants might address the gender implications of such art forms.  What is visually specific to the arts and education of girls, versus that of boys?  In addition, scholars might consider the interplay between youth movements and visual culture, or the concerns and challenges that seem particular to young artists today.  For instance, how has the AIDS epidemic affected the culture of art production today?  Where and how are artists receiving their training in changing times?  What does the visual culture of violence and the increasingly popular martial arts videos, in combination with the graphic media, and harsh realities of life in war-ravaged nations mean for young artists of today, and tomorrow?  Along a similar vein, how have artists turned to their craft to effect change for future generations?  How do the arts address such complex and challenging issues as child abuse, substance abuse and other crimes and crises of youth?  Other panels might include topics that trace cross-cultural interaction.  How has African art influenced contemporary youth in the Americas, India, or Europe?  How have the Africanisms of non-African nations been received, re-invented, or translated, when they cross back to African communities?  Panels that take a reflexive approach, such as pedagogical or historiographic analyses of the youthful discipline of African art studies, are also welcomed.

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    M: Health Issues and Youth (Meredeth Turshen, Rutgers University)
     
    Young Africans have placed their bodies and minds at the service of ideals to liberate their nations, and they have contributed their labor (disproportionately for their age group) to advance the economies of their households and their communities. But at what cost to their physical and mental health?  The health of adolescents is sorely neglected in developed countries; in Africa, the emphasis on health care for the next generation stops at the end of childhood, which can occur startlingly early in life. Young people are exposed to a host of problems, some of which are suggested below. They are in need of special attention, quite distinct from the health care given to children and adults, raising several questions. In an era of privatization of health services, how do young people on their own access health services, what kind of health care do they find, and how are they received by health professionals? Because the words “children” and “youth” are not gendered in English, there is a frequent failure to distinguish the experiences of girls and boys, young women and young men.  Panelists are urged to disaggregate their data by sex and/or gender.  Suggested problems to be explored in papers and panels might include the health care of street kids and the health hazards they confront; the psychological impact of youth caught up in civil wars—what rehabilitation do girl and boy soldiers need; access to contraception, especially for unmarried youth; occupational health hazards of young bodies hard at work too early; health care arrangements for child heads of household; children and youth orphaned by war or disease; youth caught up in drugs and drug trafficking and rehabilitation facilities for their problems; and youth caught up in sex rings, especially young girls in prostitution-- what health education and care do they have?  This section invites papers and panels focusing on health issues in Africa, whether they are focused on the specific topic of youth or broadly conceived.  Papers and panels that focus on local experiences are particularly welcome.

    N: Gender and African Youth:  Contemporary and Historical Issues (M. Priscilla Stone, Washington University)
    While the activities of African girls and young women have not often been the primary focus of research within the lively field of gender in African studies, their roles are nonetheless revealed in many spheres of African life, both past and present.  We know, for instance, that household economies are heavily dependent on the labor of African girls, but how this labor is understood, and its effect on other spheres of life -such as education of girls in the contemporary period and their economic and health prospects in the longer run -- is of considerable interest.  Young women in developing countries are known to be especially vulnerable to health problems, such as sexually transmitted infections (including HIV) that are compounded by inadequate health care and education as well as poverty.  While these development challenges may seem overwhelming, at the same time women are emerging as leaders in many very contemporary and youthful cultural fields, including art, literature and music.  Young women are also actively engaged in the political lives of their societies and past and present resistance movements and emerging democracies have involved the leadership and courage of all youth, both female and male.  Youthful women traders and entrepreneurs also are playing important roles in the development and reconstruction of African states that have been ravaged by warfare and instability.  Hopefully, young African females, while historically understudied, are coming into their own not only in the pages of scholarship but in shaping the future of their nations and societies.  We encourage papers and panels on a wide range of these and other topics having to do with gender and youth in Africa, including comparison with other regions and the diaspora.

    O: Information Technologies, Youth, and Development (Marion Frank-Wilson, Indiana University)
     
    In recent years, the development of new information technologies (ITs), such as the computer, the world wide web, electronic books - all available to various degrees through cyber cafes around the world  - have sparked discussions on whether these new technologies are a way for Africa to bridge the information gap and participate more fully in the global economy, or whether they accentuate the already existing inequalities between Africa and the industrialized nations.  With half of the African population under the age of 18, the new technologies have the potential of shaping Africa’s future in new ways.    This sub-theme invites proposals from a variety of disciplinary approaches that deal with ITs and their use and impact on youth and development in Africa.  Papers may address the issues of access to IT, e.g., is there equal access to the new  technologies in rural and urban areas? Are ITs used by both male and female youths?  Are they used by a literate elite, or are they a way for disadvantaged youths, such as street children, to participate in information gathering? 

    Papers may also look at how and for what purpose ITs are used by youth—for example, are they used as tools for information, entertainment, private communication, or as a way to develop international networks with other youth?  In this latter connection, recent information technologies create new ways of communication and potentially new networks and coalitions.  Papers may look at the relationship between the use of ITs by youth and its relationship to democracy.   They may also address what kinds of websites are accessed by African youth, and where these websites originate.  Are the new information technologies a way to empower African youth to actively participate in shaping the international discourse, or is the flow of information from North to South, with the North as the creator of information, and Africa as the recipient?  Papers may also consider broader areas, including ITs employed as tools for political and/or economic empowerment, for education, or for artistic productions. 

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    P: Music, Performance, and Popular Culture (Daniel Reed, Indiana University)
     
    In Africa today, performing arts and popular cultural expressions—from music videos to concert parties to “traditional” performance complexes like masquerades—serve as resources for young people to achieve numerous goals in relation to their increasingly pluralistic worlds.  This panel invites papers and panels that explore the kinds of social work that African youth today accomplish through music, performance and other forms of popular cultural expression. Many possible issues could be addressed. Given the centrality of performing arts to notions of individual and community identity, what particular identities are African youth expressing and generating through performance? Identity is always expressed in relation to others, and performing arts thus can be central arenas for the negotiation of conflict. As such, in what ways are African youth today, through performance, engaging contentious issues such as interethnic conflict, interreligious conflict, intergenerational conflict, or inequitable access to resources? The arts--especially music--have played key roles in numerous grass-roots campaigns of political rebellion and/or resistance in Africa. In such popular uprisings, what roles are played by popular music and its typically youthful performers? How are African youth using the arts to deal with social problems of particular relevance to them, such as HIV/AIDS and poverty?  In a time of increasing economic uncertainty on much of the continent, what opportunities do the arts provide youth in terms of economic empowerment, development, and tourism? Finally, like youth the world over, African youth today are participants in transglobal culture.  In what ways, through the arts and popular culture, do African youth contribute to and incorporate transnational streams of communication, and what meanings are generated in the process?  These are just some of the many issues that could be addressed; this section welcomes papers on any topic pertaining to the theme of youth in music, performance, and/or popular culture. 

    Q: From Figures to Producers: Youth and African Literature (Eileen Julien, University of Maryland)
    In this era of globalization with its apparent signs of promise--media and products from near and far abound and are transforming each and every corner of the world, boundaries seem less firm--many African youth have grown up under an oppressive international economic order, under dictatorships, oligarchies, or in the midst of war.  Some carry burdens beyond their years–as breadwinners, parents, prostitutes, or soldiers.  Many are orphans or refugees, living far from their homelands in camps and harsh conditions.  But youth have also shown remarkable resilience and ingenuity, as musicians, performers, creators, and as powerful political actors, changing political dynamics and urban life.  To think about literature in relationship to African youth, then, we may begin by examining images of youth: How are young people represented in literary and cinematic narratives and to what ends?  Who writes these texts and for whom?  Are “la petite vendeuse de Soleil,”  Azaro,  Askar, and Tambu, like “women” of an earlier generation of texts, written and read primarily as figures for Africa and an African future? 

    But we must go beyond representation to place youth at the very center of literary production: Are the pre-conditions for the practice of literature--schooling, literacy, libraries and a degree of wealth--being met?  Only then may we ask more precisely: What stories can an older generation tell to young people today?  What stories do youth tell for and about themselves?  What stories do they need and want?  Can the canonical texts of African literature speak to them?  Or are those texts, tragically associated with the failed suns of independence, simply irrelevant?  How have NGOs, for example, used literary forms in their work with youth? Have these processes reshaped the concept of the literary and young peoples’ understanding of literature?  What creative experiments in writing are taking place among young people?  In which languages shall they write?  In which media do educators speak best to these new generations?  And in what media do they and will they speak to themselves?  What might literature bring that forms of popular culture–radio, video, television, rap music and other forms of performance–may not?  Will literature itself be transformed by these forms?  Will it in turn help shape these media and their message? Proposals on African literature that address these and other issues are welcome.
     

    R: Youth, Conflict, and Peacekeeping in Africa (Will Reno, Northwestern University)

    Youth figure prominently in changes in Africa, for ill and for good.  This role has grown in the last decade as post 1960s social and political structures have undergone violent change in certain regions.  A common understanding of this process focuses on resulting youth violence and the role it plays in current and incipient internal conflicts.  Thus we seek proposals that address the interests, organization, and aims of youthful combatants in conflicts, and strategies for mitigating or preventing violent conflicts.  Proposals need not be limited to those that focus on youth action as a cause of conflict.  Peacekeeping may include activities of youths who take it upon themselves to challenge current social practices and relations that they regard as oppressive, constraining, and destructive.  In this regard, some engaged in violent action may regard themselves as peacekeepers vis-à-vis a fundamentally corrupt social order.  More pacific youthful peacekeepers organize conflict resolution groups—Christian and Islamic—in countries plagued by violence. 

    We are soliciting paper and panel proposals that are located in this expansive interpretation of youth conflict and peacekeeping.  Topics can include (but are not limited to) matters such as:
    - The role of ideologies in the formation, organization, and methods of violent youth groups.
    - Youth and the policies of foreign (UN and regional) peacekeeping operations.
    - Youth who organize to mitigate conflicts in their communities.
    - Youth activists fighting corruption and crime (as “peacemakers”).
    - Religious inspired youth redefining roles and institutions in society.
    - Youth who organize new types of NGOs.
     

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    S. The Quest for Educational Relevance (W. Stephen Howard, Ohio University)
     
    Africa’s leaders promised their people access to formal schooling in exchange for their participation in the continent’s independence struggles. This uncertain promise has long been counted on as the primary engine for both socio-economic development and the construction of civil society.  School has been a popular setting in the African cultural imagination, vivid in novels and music, an aspect of the promise that education may hold. From the late colonial period to the present the crucial tension in Africa’s educational systems has been between ‘relevance for now’ and ‘relevance for the future.’ The articulation of African societies and education varies from ‘informal’ education with practical skills training, to the ‘formal’ education of increasingly sophisticated school and university curricula that cannot address all of Africa’s social and economic needs.  Despite recent advances Africa is still the most unschooled, illiterate and innumerate of continents. 

    Education is ubiquitous among African social institutions and scholarship is sought that situates education historically. We would like to see papers that interrogate education’s role at the intersection of African youth and the wider society.  The access of the girl child to educational resources and the role that education plays in changing social behaviors in health, HIV/AIDS, gender relations, rural-urban migration, and political/national identification, also are germane topics for examination.  We also seek papers that address alternative agencies for delivery of educational services, such as indigenous and international non-governmental organizations and the role of religious groups in education.  Other topics for papers and panels might include the policy issues of government spending on education and the provision of universal primary education, early childhood education, structural adjustment and user fees, and the choice of language of instruction and its role in the preservation of the less commonly spoken languages.  We look forward to participation from both practitioners and academics.
     

    T. Youth, Social Movements, and Grassroots Activism (Steven Ndegwa, William and Mary College)

    Social movements and grassroots activism have reemerged strongly in African countries, especially within the fluidity of institutional change over the last decade. These movements have sought to challenge, alter, or reinvent social, cultural, economic, and political spaces and institutions. The youth in particular have been at the heart of these movements not simply as mass followers but also as leaders. While popular perceptions have emphasized the youth in troubled roles such as rebel soldiers, warlord muscle, or riotous mobs, young people’s roles within social movements have varied. These roles range from articulation of alternative ideas and practices in development and broader social relations (e.g. through NGOs and global fora) to expressing new conservatisms (e.g. through fundamentalists sects and revivalist movements). Thus, the youth in Africa are re-defining social relations and institutions --  claiming today the oft-repeated adage that they are the ‘leaders of tomorrow’. 

    In order to comprehensively explore the role of social movements and grassroots activism (and especially of the youth within them), we invite proposals for papers and panels that report new findings, ponder new questions or old questions anew. We invite presentations that will help scholars, policy makers, and the public at large understand the dimensions and content of social movements, grassroots activism and especially the role of the youth in them. Presentations that seek to also promote a better theoretical understanding and that engage the prevailing popular perceptions of the youth in social movements are particularly welcomed. Moreover, papers and panels including younger scholars and/or youth activists are particularly encouraged.
     

    U. Archaeology and Uncovering the Past  (Fiona Marshall, Washington University and Adria LaViolette, University of Virginia)

     
    The African archaeological record is unique in many ways. Africa is the only place in the world where human societal change can be followed through the last several million years. Other African patterns include domestication of animals before plants, and the subsequent development of mobile, egalitarian food producing societies. Organization of urban societies is also diverse and distinctively African.  This archaeological record offers long-term perspectives on many issues central to Africa today. Population growth and population movement, as well as changing patterns of exchange and trade, can be seen over millennia and vast geographical expanses. The development of African domesticates, adoption of Asian and American crops, and continued use of wild resources, contextualizes current debates over use of indigenous crops and breeds, and maintenance of biodiversity. Gender issues and the role of youth in past African societies can be seen through changing demographics, burial practices, ornaments, and images in rock art. This year’s theme of “Youthful Africa in the 21st Century” opens many avenues for archaeological consideration, though not all papers at the annual meeting need to be concerned directly with this theme.  The organizers welcome a range of different subjects and topics in African Archaeology.  We are particularly interested in papers and panels that highlight the distinctive character of the African archaeological record, and those that provide long term perspectives on current issues.

    V: If none of the sections is appropiate for the proposed paper or panel, or if you are unclear as to what is the right section, designate section Z.

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