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African Studies Association

The African Studies Association (ASA) is a US-based association of scholars, students, practitioners, and institutions with an interest in the continent of Africa. Founded in 1957, the ASA is the leading organization of African Studies in North America, with a global membership of approximately 2000.[1] The association's headquarters are at Rutgers University in New Jersey. The ASA holds annual conferences[2] and virtual events for its members year-round.

African Studies Association
ASA Logo (updated 2018)
Formation1957
HeadquartersNew Brunswick, New Jersey
Membership
2000
President
Gretchen Bauer
Websitehttps://www.africanstudies.org/

As a result of racial and political disputes over exclusion from leadership positions of black academics and ASA leaders' ties with the US intelligence and military in the mid-twentieth century, the ASA split in 1968, when the Black Caucus of the ASA, led by John Henrik Clarke, founded the African Heritage Studies Association (AHSA).[3][4][5]

The ASA is different from the African Studies Association of Africa (ASAA), which was founded at the University of Cape Town in October 1-2, 2012.[6]

Awards given by ASA edit

ASA Best Book Prize edit

The ASA Book Prize is given annually for the best scholarly work (including translations) on Africa published in English in the previous year and distributed in the United States.[7] The award was originally named after Melville Herskovits, one of the founders of the ASA. The name was changed in 2019 as the ASA considered how to decolonize the discipline of African studies.[8]

Distinguished Africanist Award edit

Beginning in 1984, the association has awarded the Distinguished Africanist Award.[9] In 2000, 2001, 2022, and 2023 two awards were given. Winners include:

Bethwell Ogot Book Prize edit

The Bethwell A. Ogot Book Prize of the African Studies Association is awarded annually at the ASA Annual Meeting to the author of the best book on East African Studies published in the previous calendar year. Initiated in 2012, the award was made possible by a generous bequest from the estate of the late Professor Kennell Jackson, the award honors the eminent historian, Professor Bethwell A. Ogot.[13]

Winners of this award are:

  • 2012 Andrew Ivaska, Cultured States: Youth, Gender, and Modern Style in 1960s Dar es Salaam
  • 2013 James R. Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania
  • 2014 Shane Doyle, Before HIV: Sexuality, Fertility and Mortality in East Africa 1900–1980
  • 2015 J.J. Carney, Rwanda Before the Genocide: Catholic Politics and Ethnic Discourse in the Late Colonial Era
  • 2016 Elena Vezzadini, Lost Nationalism Revolution, Memory and Anti-colonial Resistance in Sudan
  • 2017 Bert Ingelaere, Inside Rwanda's Gacaca Courts: Seeking Justice after Genocide
  • 2018 Getnet Bekele, Ploughing New Ground: Food, Farming, and Environmental Change in Ethiopia
  • 2019 Laura Fair, Reel Pleasures: Cinema Audiences and Entrepreneurs in Twentieth-Century Urban Tanzania
  • 2020 Elizabeth Giorgis, Modernist Art in Ethiopia
  • 2021 Mai Hassan, Regime Threats and State Solutions: Bureaucratic Loyalty and Embeddedness in Kenya
  • 2022 David L. Schoenbrun, The Names of the Python: Belonging in East Africa, 900 to 1930[14]
  • 2023 Claire L. Wendland, Partial Stories: Maternal Death from Six Angles[12]

Graduate Student Paper Prize edit

In 2001, the ASA Board of Directors established an annual prize for the best graduate student paper. The prize is awarded at the Annual Meeting for an essay presented at the previous year's Annual Meeting. This prize highlights exceptional scholarship produced by emerging scholars in any African studies related discipline.[15]

Winners of this award are:

  • 2002 – Benjamin Lawrance, “Le Revolte des Femmes: Economic Upheaval and the Gender of Political Authority in Lome, Togo, 1931-33”
  • 2003 – Staffan Lindberg, “The ‘Democraticness’ of Multiparty Elections: Participation, Competition, and Legitimacy in Africa”
  • 2004 – Kristin E. Cheney, “Village Life is Better than Town Life’: identity, migration and development in the Lives of Ugandan child citizens”
  • 2005 – Abena Dove Osseo-Asare, “’Dangerous Properties’: Poisoned Arrows and the Case of Strophanthus hispidus in Colonial Gold Coast, 1885 – 1922″
  • 2006 – Séverine Autesserre, “Local Violence, National Peace? Local Dynamics of Violence during the Transition in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo”
  • 2007 – Habtamu Mengistie Tegegne, “Revisiting Land Tenure in Eighteenth Century Gondärine Ethiopia: Zéga and the Land Charter of Däbrä-Sehay Qwesqwam Church”
  • 2008 – Kristin D. Phillips, “Consuming the State: Hunger, Healing, and Citizenship in Rural Tanzania”
  • 2009 – Bert Ingelaere, “Peasants, Power, and Ethnicity: Centre and Periphery in the Knowledge Construction in/on Post-Genocide Rwanda”
  • 2010 – Laura Weinstein, “The Politics of Government Expenditures in Tanzania: 1999-2007”
  • 2011 – Noel Twagiramungu, “The Anatomy of Leadership: A view-from-within Post-genocide Rwanda”
  • 2013 – Jamie Miller, “Yes, Minister: Reassessing South Africa's Intervention in the Angolan Civil War”
  • 2014 – Catherine Porter, “Bound and Unbound Identities: The Reconstruction of Katanga's Nationhood Struggle”
  • 2015 – Kathleen Klaus, “Contentious Land Claims and the Non-Escalation of Violence: Evidence from Kenya's Coast Region
  • 2016 – Moritz Nagel, “Precolonial Segmentation Revisited: Initiation Societies, Talking Drums and the Ngondo Festival in the Cameroons”
  • 2017 – Amanda B. Edgell, “Vying for the ‘Man's Seat’ – Constituency Magnitude and Mainstream Female Candidature for Non-Quota Seats in Uganda and Kenya”
  • 2018 – Shaonan Liu, “Symbol of Wealth and Prestige: A Social History of Chinese-made Enamelware in Northern Nigeria”
  • 2019 – Victoria Mary Gorham, “Displaying the Nation: Museums and Nation-Building in Tanzania and Kenya”
  • 2020 – Allen Xiao, “Lagos in Life: Placing Cities in Lived Experiences”
  • 2021 – Justin Haruyama, “Shortcut English: A Pidgin Language and Symbolic Power at a Chinese-operated Mine in Zambia.”

Conover-Porter Award for Africana Bibliography or Reference Work, 1980 - 2018 edit

The Conover-Porter Award is a biannual prize presented during 1980 - 2018 by the Africana Librarians Council of the African Studies Association (US) to reward outstanding achievement in Africana bibliography and reference tools. It honors two pioneers in African Studies bibliography, Helen F. Conover, of the Library of Congress, and Dorothy B. Porter, of Howard University.[16] Latest and first awards:

  • 2018 – co-winners Historical dictionary of women in sub-saharan Africa by Kathleen Sheldon. 2nd ed. Rowman & Littlefield, 2016, and the project Dictionary of African Christian biography (DACB) by Jonathan Bonk, project director Overseas Ministries Study Center; Center for Global Christianity and Mission, Boston University.
  • 1980 – The United States and Africa: guide to U.S. official documents and government-sponsored publications on Africa, 1785-1975, compiled by Julian W. Witherell. Washington: General Reference and Bibliography Division, Reader Services Dept., Library of Congress, [1978].

Presidents of ASA edit

Presidents of the ASA are elected annually by the membership. They include:[17]

Publications edit

Publications include History in Africa: A Journal of Method, published annually and African Studies Review, published quarterly. The Association publishes a biannual newsletter ASA News for its members, and runs a news blog.

African Heritage Studies Association edit

The African Heritage Studies Association was originally an offshoot of the African Studies Association,[3][22] and was founded in 1968 by the ASA's Black Caucus and led by John Henrik Clarke.[4][23][24]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "About the ASA".
  2. ^ "Annual Meeting". African Studies Association Portal – ASA – ASA. Retrieved 2022-09-14.
  3. ^ a b "Supporting exploration, education and preservation". ahsa50.org. African Heritage Studies Association. 2022. Retrieved 7 January 2023. The African Heritage Studies Association (AHSA) was founded in 1969 as an association of scholars of African descent, dedicated to the exploration, preservation, and academic presentation of the heritage of African people on the ancestral soil of Africa and in the diaspora.
  4. ^ a b Eric Kofi Acree. "John Henrik Clarke: Historian, Scholar, and Teacher". Africana Library, Cornell University. from the original on 31 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
  5. ^ Wiley, David (2013). "Militarizing Africa and African Studies and the U.S. Africanist Response". African Studies Review. 55 (2): 147–161. doi:10.1353/arw.2012.0041. ISSN 0002-0206.
  6. ^ "African Studies Association of Africa - ASAA - About ASAA". as-aa.org. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
  7. ^ . africanstudies.org. Archived from the original on 16 May 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  8. ^ "ASA 2018 Presidential Lecture | Ghostarchive". ghostarchive.org. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  9. ^ "Distinguished Africanist Award". African Studies Association. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  10. ^ The award to Senghor was not without controversy. Bensaid, Alexandra and Whitehead, Andrew (1995) "Literature: Award to Senghor Triggers Debate" IPS-Inter Press Service, 18 April 1995, accessed via the commercial service Lexis/Nexis, 30 December 2008
  11. ^ "Brenda Randolph Receives the Distinguished Africanist Award". Howard University. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  12. ^ a b c "2023 ASA Award Winners". African Studies Association (ASA). Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  13. ^ "Bethwell A. Ogot Book Prize". African Studies Association. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  14. ^ U of Wisconsin Press [@UWiscPress] (November 21, 2022). "Congratulations to David Schoenbrun" (Tweet). Retweeted by @ASANewsOnline – via Twitter.
  15. ^ "Graduate Student Paper Prize".
  16. ^ "ALC : Africana Librarians Council: ALC Conover Porter Award : Nominations & Winners, 1980-present". guides.library.upenn.edu. Penn Libraries. University of Pennsylvania. April 22, 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  17. ^ "Past Presidents of the ASA".
  18. ^ Elected ex-officio.
  19. ^ Died before taking office.
  20. ^ a b . African Studies Association. Archived from the original on 24 Dec 2022. Retrieved 24 Dec 2022.
  21. ^ "ASA Board of Directors". African Studies Association. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  22. ^ "Our Vision".
  23. ^ Diamond, Sara (2001). "African Heritage Studies Association". In Nina Mjagkij (ed.). Organizing Black America: an encyclopedia of African American associations. Taylor & Francis. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-8153-2309-3. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
  24. ^ Martin, William G.; West, Michael Oliver (1999). Out of one, many Africas: reconstructing the study and meaning of Africa. University of Illinois Press. pp. 99–106. ISBN 0-252-06780-0. Retrieved 2009-06-27.

External links edit

  • Official website

african, studies, association, confused, with, united, kingdom, based, association, scholars, students, practitioners, institutions, with, interest, continent, africa, founded, 1957, leading, organization, african, studies, north, america, with, global, member. Not to be confused with African Studies Association of the United Kingdom The African Studies Association ASA is a US based association of scholars students practitioners and institutions with an interest in the continent of Africa Founded in 1957 the ASA is the leading organization of African Studies in North America with a global membership of approximately 2000 1 The association s headquarters are at Rutgers University in New Jersey The ASA holds annual conferences 2 and virtual events for its members year round African Studies AssociationASA Logo updated 2018 Formation1957HeadquartersNew Brunswick New JerseyMembership2000PresidentGretchen BauerWebsitehttps www africanstudies org As a result of racial and political disputes over exclusion from leadership positions of black academics and ASA leaders ties with the US intelligence and military in the mid twentieth century the ASA split in 1968 when the Black Caucus of the ASA led by John Henrik Clarke founded the African Heritage Studies Association AHSA 3 4 5 The ASA is different from the African Studies Association of Africa ASAA which was founded at the University of Cape Town in October 1 2 2012 6 Contents 1 Awards given by ASA 1 1 ASA Best Book Prize 1 2 Distinguished Africanist Award 1 3 Bethwell Ogot Book Prize 1 4 Graduate Student Paper Prize 1 5 Conover Porter Award for Africana Bibliography or Reference Work 1980 2018 2 Presidents of ASA 3 Publications 4 African Heritage Studies Association 5 Notes 6 External linksAwards given by ASA editASA Best Book Prize edit Main article ASA Best Book Prize The ASA Book Prize is given annually for the best scholarly work including translations on Africa published in English in the previous year and distributed in the United States 7 The award was originally named after Melville Herskovits one of the founders of the ASA The name was changed in 2019 as the ASA considered how to decolonize the discipline of African studies 8 Distinguished Africanist Award edit Beginning in 1984 the association has awarded the Distinguished Africanist Award 9 In 2000 2001 2022 and 2023 two awards were given Winners include 1984 Gwendolen M Carter 1985 Elliott Skinner 1986 Jan Vansina 1987 Joseph Greenberg 1988 Elizabeth Colson 1989 Roland Oliver 1991 Howard Wolpe 1992 Philip D Curtin 1993 J Ade Ajayi 1994 Leopold Sedar Senghor 10 1995 Ali A Mazrui 1996 Thandika Mkandawire 1997 Akin Mabogunje 1998 Ivor Wilks 1999 Catherine Coquery Vidrovitch 2000 Bernth Lindfors 2000 J H Kwabena Nketia 2001 Martin A Klein 2001 Bethwell Ogot 2002 Peter Geschiere 2003 Joseph E Harris 2004 Francis Deng 2005 John Hunwick 2006 Bogumil Jewsiewicki 2007 John Francis Marchment Middleton 2008 Edmond Keller 2009 David Robinson 2010 Terence Ranger 2011 Toyin Falola 2012 Jane Guyer 2013 Allen Isaacman 2014 Boubacar Barry 2015 Goran Hyden 2016 Sara Berry 2017 Iris Berger 2018 Emmanuel Gyimah Boadi 2019 Pearl T Robinson 2020 Frederick Cooper 2021 Oyeronkẹ Oyewumi 2022 Steve Howard 2022 Brenda Randolph 11 2023 Richard Joseph 12 2023 Kenneth Harrow 12 Bethwell Ogot Book Prize edit The Bethwell A Ogot Book Prize of the African Studies Association is awarded annually at the ASA Annual Meeting to the author of the best book on East African Studies published in the previous calendar year Initiated in 2012 the award was made possible by a generous bequest from the estate of the late Professor Kennell Jackson the award honors the eminent historian Professor Bethwell A Ogot 13 Winners of this award are 2012 Andrew Ivaska Cultured States Youth Gender and Modern Style in 1960s Dar es Salaam 2013 James R Brennan Taifa Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania 2014 Shane Doyle Before HIV Sexuality Fertility and Mortality in East Africa 1900 1980 2015 J J Carney Rwanda Before the Genocide Catholic Politics and Ethnic Discourse in the Late Colonial Era 2016 Elena Vezzadini Lost Nationalism Revolution Memory and Anti colonial Resistance in Sudan 2017 Bert Ingelaere Inside Rwanda s Gacaca Courts Seeking Justice after Genocide 2018 Getnet Bekele Ploughing New Ground Food Farming and Environmental Change in Ethiopia 2019 Laura Fair Reel Pleasures Cinema Audiences and Entrepreneurs in Twentieth Century Urban Tanzania 2020 Elizabeth Giorgis Modernist Art in Ethiopia 2021 Mai Hassan Regime Threats and State Solutions Bureaucratic Loyalty and Embeddedness in Kenya 2022 David L Schoenbrun The Names of the Python Belonging in East Africa 900 to 1930 14 2023 Claire L Wendland Partial Stories Maternal Death from Six Angles 12 Graduate Student Paper Prize edit In 2001 the ASA Board of Directors established an annual prize for the best graduate student paper The prize is awarded at the Annual Meeting for an essay presented at the previous year s Annual Meeting This prize highlights exceptional scholarship produced by emerging scholars in any African studies related discipline 15 Winners of this award are 2002 Benjamin Lawrance Le Revolte des Femmes Economic Upheaval and the Gender of Political Authority in Lome Togo 1931 33 2003 Staffan Lindberg The Democraticness of Multiparty Elections Participation Competition and Legitimacy in Africa 2004 Kristin E Cheney Village Life is Better than Town Life identity migration and development in the Lives of Ugandan child citizens 2005 Abena Dove Osseo Asare Dangerous Properties Poisoned Arrows and the Case of Strophanthus hispidus in Colonial Gold Coast 1885 1922 2006 Severine Autesserre Local Violence National Peace Local Dynamics of Violence during the Transition in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo 2007 Habtamu Mengistie Tegegne Revisiting Land Tenure in Eighteenth Century Gondarine Ethiopia Zega and the Land Charter of Dabra Sehay Qwesqwam Church 2008 Kristin D Phillips Consuming the State Hunger Healing and Citizenship in Rural Tanzania 2009 Bert Ingelaere Peasants Power and Ethnicity Centre and Periphery in the Knowledge Construction in on Post Genocide Rwanda 2010 Laura Weinstein The Politics of Government Expenditures in Tanzania 1999 2007 2011 Noel Twagiramungu The Anatomy of Leadership A view from within Post genocide Rwanda 2013 Jamie Miller Yes Minister Reassessing South Africa s Intervention in the Angolan Civil War 2014 Catherine Porter Bound and Unbound Identities The Reconstruction of Katanga s Nationhood Struggle 2015 Kathleen Klaus Contentious Land Claims and the Non Escalation of Violence Evidence from Kenya s Coast Region 2016 Moritz Nagel Precolonial Segmentation Revisited Initiation Societies Talking Drums and the Ngondo Festival in the Cameroons 2017 Amanda B Edgell Vying for the Man s Seat Constituency Magnitude and Mainstream Female Candidature for Non Quota Seats in Uganda and Kenya 2018 Shaonan Liu Symbol of Wealth and Prestige A Social History of Chinese made Enamelware in Northern Nigeria 2019 Victoria Mary Gorham Displaying the Nation Museums and Nation Building in Tanzania and Kenya 2020 Allen Xiao Lagos in Life Placing Cities in Lived Experiences 2021 Justin Haruyama Shortcut English A Pidgin Language and Symbolic Power at a Chinese operated Mine in Zambia Conover Porter Award for Africana Bibliography or Reference Work 1980 2018 edit The Conover Porter Award is a biannual prize presented during 1980 2018 by the Africana Librarians Council of the African Studies Association US to reward outstanding achievement in Africana bibliography and reference tools It honors two pioneers in African Studies bibliography Helen F Conover of the Library of Congress and Dorothy B Porter of Howard University 16 Latest and first awards 2018 co winners Historical dictionary of women in sub saharan Africa by Kathleen Sheldon 2nd ed Rowman amp Littlefield 2016 and the project Dictionary of African Christian biography DACB by Jonathan Bonk project director Overseas Ministries Study Center Center for Global Christianity and Mission Boston University 1980 The United States and Africa guide to U S official documents and government sponsored publications on Africa 1785 1975 compiled by Julian W Witherell Washington General Reference and Bibliography Division Reader Services Dept Library of Congress 1978 Presidents of ASA editPresidents of the ASA are elected annually by the membership They include 17 1957 1958 Melville Herskovits Northwestern University 1958 Gwendolen M Carter Smith College 18 1959 William O Brown Boston University 1960 Cornelius W deKiewiet 1961 William O Jones Stanford University 1962 Vernon McKay Johns Hopkins University 1963 E Franklin Frazier Howard University 19 1963 James Smoot Coleman University of California Los Angeles 1963 Hans Wolff Michigan State University 1964 Paul J Bohannan Northwestern University 1965 Joseph H Greenberg Stanford University 1966 Rupert Emerson Harvard University 1967 William A Hance Columbia University 1968 James Duffy Brandeis University 1969 Benjamin E Thomas University of California 1970 L Gray Cowan Columbia University 1971 Philip D Curtin University of Wisconsin 1972 Carl G Rosberg University of California Berkeley 1973 Immanuel Wallerstein McGill University 1974 Absolom Vilakazi The American University 1975 John Marcum University of California Santa Cruz 1976 Victor Uchendu University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign 1977 Edris Makward University of Wisconsin Madison 1978 J Gus Liebenow Indiana University 1979 Ali Mazrui University of Michigan 1980 Peter Gutkind McGill University 1981 Norman Bennett Boston University 1982 Richard Sklar University of California Los Angeles 1983 M Crawford Young University of Wisconsin Madison 1984 Laura Bohannan University of Illinois at Chicago Circle 1985 Robert J Cummings Howard University 1986 Gerald J Bender University of Southern California 1987 Aidan Southall University of Wisconsin Madison 1988 Georges Nzongola Ntalaja Howard University 1989 Simon Ottenberg University of Washington 1990 Ann Seidman Clark University 1991 Martin A Klein University of Toronto 1992 Edmond J Keller University of California Los Angeles 1993 David Robinson Michigan State University 1994 Edward A Alpers University of California Los Angeles 1995 Goran Hyden University of Florida 1996 Iris Berger State University of New York at Albany 1997 Gwendolyn Mikell Georgetown University 1998 Sandra Greene Cornell University 1999 David Wiley Michigan State University 2000 Lansine Kaba University of Illinois 2001 Catharine Newbury University of North Carolina 2002 Allen Isaacman University of Minnesota 2003 Beverly Grier Clark University 2004 Sandra T Barnes University of Pennsylvania 2005 Bruce J Berman Queen s University 2006 Joseph C Miller University of Virginia 2007 Pearl T Robinson Tufts University 2008 Aliko Songolo University of Wisconsin Madison 2009 Paul Tiyambe Zeleza Loyola Marymount University 2012 Aili M Tripp University of Wisconsin Madison 2013 Abdi Samatar University of Minnesota 2014 James A Pritchett Michigan State University 2015 Toyin Falola University of Texas Austin 2016 Dorothy Hodgson Rutgers University 2017 Anne Pitcher University of Michigan 2018 Jean Allman Washington University in St Louis 2019 Maria Grosz Ngate Indiana University 2020 Ato Quayson Stanford University 2021 Carolyn A Brown Rutgers University 20 2022 Ousseina D Alidou Rutgers University 20 2023 Aderonke Adesola Adesanya James Madison University 21 2024 Gretchen Bauer University of DelawarePublications editPublications include History in Africa A Journal of Method published annually and African Studies Review published quarterly The Association publishes a biannual newsletter ASA News for its members and runs a news blog African Heritage Studies Association editThe African Heritage Studies Association was originally an offshoot of the African Studies Association 3 22 and was founded in 1968 by the ASA s Black Caucus and led by John Henrik Clarke 4 23 24 Notes edit About the ASA Annual Meeting African Studies Association Portal ASA ASA Retrieved 2022 09 14 a b Supporting exploration education and preservation ahsa50 org African Heritage Studies Association 2022 Retrieved 7 January 2023 The African Heritage Studies Association AHSA was founded in 1969 as an association of scholars of African descent dedicated to the exploration preservation and academic presentation of the heritage of African people on the ancestral soil of Africa and in the diaspora a b Eric Kofi Acree John Henrik Clarke Historian Scholar and Teacher Africana Library Cornell University Archived from the original on 31 May 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 16 Wiley David 2013 Militarizing Africa and African Studies and the U S Africanist Response African Studies Review 55 2 147 161 doi 10 1353 arw 2012 0041 ISSN 0002 0206 African Studies Association of Africa ASAA About ASAA as aa org Retrieved 2023 01 07 ASA Best Book Prize africanstudies org Archived from the original on 16 May 2022 Retrieved 24 March 2022 ASA 2018 Presidential Lecture Ghostarchive ghostarchive org Retrieved 2022 12 24 Distinguished Africanist Award African Studies Association Retrieved 23 March 2022 The award to Senghor was not without controversy Bensaid Alexandra and Whitehead Andrew 1995 Literature Award to Senghor Triggers Debate IPS Inter Press Service 18 April 1995 accessed via the commercial service Lexis Nexis 30 December 2008 Brenda Randolph Receives the Distinguished Africanist Award Howard University Retrieved 23 November 2022 a b c 2023 ASA Award Winners African Studies Association ASA Retrieved 1 January 2024 Bethwell A Ogot Book Prize African Studies Association Retrieved 24 March 2022 U of Wisconsin Press UWiscPress November 21 2022 Congratulations to David Schoenbrun Tweet Retweeted by ASANewsOnline via Twitter Graduate Student Paper Prize ALC Africana Librarians Council ALC Conover Porter Award Nominations amp Winners 1980 present guides library upenn edu Penn Libraries University of Pennsylvania April 22 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2023 Past Presidents of the ASA Elected ex officio Died before taking office a b ASA Board of Directors African Studies Association Archived from the original on 24 Dec 2022 Retrieved 24 Dec 2022 ASA Board of Directors African Studies Association Retrieved 9 July 2023 Our Vision Diamond Sara 2001 African Heritage Studies Association In Nina Mjagkij ed Organizing Black America an encyclopedia of African American associations Taylor amp Francis pp 16 17 ISBN 0 8153 2309 3 Retrieved 2009 06 10 Martin William G West Michael Oliver 1999 Out of one many Africas reconstructing the study and meaning of Africa University of Illinois Press pp 99 106 ISBN 0 252 06780 0 Retrieved 2009 06 27 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African Studies Association amp oldid 1193108784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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