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ANU Africa Network
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This website was established in 2013 by David Lucas, and renovated and relaunched in 2020 as part of a project to increase awareness of Africa and African studies in the ANU and the ACT, funded by the Australian Government’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Another outcome of that project was a major research report, published in August 2021, African Studies at the Australian National University and in the Australian Capital Territory, analyzing the past, present and future of the study of Africa at the Australian National University and the wider Australian University sector.
The major innovation on this updated website is the creation of the ACT Africa Expert Directory which lists experts on Africa from institutions around the ACT, primarily the ANU. We will continue to curate this list, offering a key resource for media, government and non-government organizations seeking expert facts and opinions on Africa. Individuals can request to be added to the list by contacting the website managers.
Another notable addition is the expanded directory of PhD theses on Africa produced in the territory’s universities, a solid measure of the vitality of the study of Africa in the city of Canberra.
Reviewing these directories, it is revealing to note that the vast majority of research on Africa is produced by disciplinary experts (environmental scientists, economists, demographers, etc.) rather than area studies experts. This means that the study of Africa is woven into the fabric of the research culture of the ANU and the ACT’s other universities in ways that are not necessarily apparent.
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ANU’S Africa Collection
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Bernie Baffour and David Lucas recently visited Claire Sheridan, Senior Collections Advisor, ANU, and she has given this update on the largely forgotten ANU African Collection:
‘The ANU Collections team recently re-located the London Collection of African Artefacts (primarily containing material from Nigeria, Ghana and Benin, collected between 1901-1920 by Arthur London) from Kioloa Coastal Campus to the ANU Campus in preparation for conservation work, cataloguing and re-boxing. Our next step will be to start a research project on the Collection’s provenance and assess the significance of this material so that we can determine the future of this Collection at the ANU.’
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African Languages at ANU
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From the webpage for Dr Rosey Billington https://researchers.anu.edu.au/researchers/billington-r
‘I have also undertaken research on the phonetics and phonology of Lopit, an Eastern Nilotic language of South Sudan.’ ‘I maintain an interest in research on the phonetic characteristics of English varieties in Australia, and in creole languages of the Pacific and Africa.’
Her publications include Moodie, Jonathan & Billington, Rosey 2020, A grammar of Lopit: An Eastern Nilotic language of South Sudan , Brill, Leiden ; Boston.
Dr Billington “welcomes proposals for Honours/Masters research’ .. ‘including “Phonetics and phonology of Nilotic languages of East Africa
Current student projects include Shubo Li, Honours Thesis (in progress), The phonetics and phonology of the Kufo language,
More about the work of Shubo Li and Keira Mullan on the Kufo language is available at: https://www.dynamicsoflanguage.edu.au/news-and-media/latest-headlines/article/?id=pursuing-a-long-held-dream-of-language-preservation
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Dr Liang Chen returns to the University of Botswana
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ANU alumnus Dr Liang Chen has returned to the University of Botswana in mid-July. He spent the first semester in Gaberone teaching four courses in the Chinese Studies program there. In the second semester he plans to undertake anthropological research on in-migrants and immigrants in the Gaberone District.
Details of Dr Liang’s ANU seminar on ‘God, Development, and Technology Transfer: Medicated Ethics between Chinese and Ethiopians’ were posted on this blog in 13/4/2021.
His spouse Naijing Liu is completing her doctorate in linguistics at the ANU, Her research interests, which she hopes to continue in Botswana, include the documentation of endangered languages.