Africa-Europe Group for Interdisciplinary Studies

AEGIS is a research network of European centres on African studies in the fields of social science and humanities. AEGIS' main goal is to improve understanding about contemporary African societies.

Opening of the ECAS Conference 2019, McEwan Hall, University of Edinburgh. On stage from the left Mamadou Diouf (Columbia University), Thomas Molony (University of Edinburgh) and Amanda Hammar (AEGIS president, Centre of African Studies, Copenhagen).

History and organisation

AEGIS was founded in 1991 by African studies centres in Bayreuth, Bordeaux, Leiden, London, and Uppsala. Initially an informal grouping of related African Studies' organisations and groups, AEGIS would formalise in 1998 through the adoption of a formal statute. In the same year, it elected its first executive committee, composed of Patrick Chabal (London, Chairman), Gerti Hesseling (Leiden) and Franz-Wilhelm Heimer (Lisbon). In the course of a decade, it developed into a network that included centres from more European countries.[1]

Starting in 1998, international conferences on a variety of thematic areas were organized in different countries. AEGIS continues to host thematic conferences (not to be confused with the ECAS gatherings, detailed below).

AEGIS organises itself into small thematic groups (also called Collaborative Research Groups, or CRGS), focusing on specific subjects within the field of African Studies. Examples include 'CRG Africa in the Indian Ocean', 'CRG African Borderlands Research Network' and 'CRG African Migration, Mobility and Displacement (AMMODI)'.[1]

The current board consists of AEGIS President and Professor Amanda Hammar (CAS Copenhagen), Dr. David Ambrosetti (LAM Bordeaux), Professor Michael Bollig (Cologne), Professor Jan-Bart Gewald (Leiden), Dr. Tom Molony (Edinburgh) and Dr. Isabella Soi (Cagliari).[1]

European Conferences on African Studies (ECAS)

In the new millennium, the organization of European Conferences on African Studies (ECAS), open to everybody, became the central activity. The conferences take place every two years, always in a different country.[2] ECAS 2021, scheduled to be held in Cologne, was postponed to June 2023.

See also

References

  1. "AEGIS African studies in Europe. A network in excellence". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022./
  2. "European conferences on African studies". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  3. "1st European Conference on African Studies: ECAS June 29 - July 2, 2005 at the School of Oriental and African Studies and the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London, UK. Approaching the post-colonial half century in sub-Saharan Africa". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  4. "AEGIS European Conference on African Studies 11 - 14 July 2007 African Studies Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands. African Alternatives: Initiative and Creativity beyond Current Constraints". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  5. "ECAS 2009 3rd European Conference on African Studies Leipzig, 4 to 7 June 2009". Archived from the original on 2012-02-20. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  6. "ECAS 2011 - 4th European Conference on African Studies Uppsala 15-18 June 2011 African Engagements: On Whose Terms?". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  7. "ECAS 2013 5th European Conference on African Studies. African dynamics in a multipolar world, June 27-29 Lisbon". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  8. "ECAS 2015 6th EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON AFRICAN STUDIES Paris, 8-10 July 2015. Collective mobilisations in Africa: contestation, resistance, revolt". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  9. "ECAS7 7th European Conference on African Studies Basel, 29 June - 1 July 2017. Urban Africa - Urban Africans: New encounters of the rural and the urban". ecas2017.ch. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  10. "ECAS2019. Africa: Connections and Disruptions, Edinburgh, June 11-14 2019". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  11. "ECAS9 2023, 31 May - 3 June 2023. African Futures". aegis-eu.org. AEGIS. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
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