The Unfinished Business of Liberation and Transformation: Revisiting The 1958 All-African People’s Conference

This book features essays, speeches, and reflections from the 60th-anniversary commemoration of the All-African People’s Conference (AAPC), an epochal event in the history of Africa’s fight for liberation. The four-day conference was a collaboration between the Institute of African Studies, the Trades Union Congress of Ghana, the Socialist Forum of Ghana, Lincoln University, and the Third World Network Africa. The stories, essays, speeches, and poems featured in this book are not simply a reflection of the past – they are a call to action for the present and future generations of Pan‑Africanists. May this book serve as a reminder that our liberation is intertwined with the liberation of others and that we must work together toward building a more just and equitable world. Let us continue to inspire the next generation of Pan-Africanists and keep the spirit of the All‑African People’s Conference alive. The book offers valuable perspectives on Africa’s current predicaments and what a truly liberated Africa can offer to the world.

The Unfinished Business of African Liberation is a path‐breaking collection of proceedings commemorating the 1958 landmark All African People’s Conference. The volume is essential reading for all those interested in pursuing African decolonization and liberation in the 21st century.
Amina Mama, Professor, Gender, Sexuality & Women’s Studies, University of California, Davis, former Kwame Nkrumah Chair in African Studies at the University of Ghana

It is a must‐read for all who care about the contemporary plight of African people.
Sylvia Tamale, Decolonial feminist & Professor of Law, School of Law, Makerere University, Uganda

This collection presents critical thinking by a wide spectrum of Pan‐African workers, youth, women, students, intellectuals, businesspeople, activists, academics, and politicians.
— Adotey Bing-Pappoe, Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics and International Business, University of Greenwich

ISBN Print: 9781998309030
Publication Date: July 2024
Page Count: 380
Binding Type: Soft Cover
Trim Size: 6in x 9in
Language: English
Colour: Colour

USD $ 47.00

Clear

• Dzodzi Tsikata ([email protected]) is a Distinguished Research Professor of Development Studies at SOAS, University of London. Before this, she was a Professor of Development Sociology and is the immediate past Director of the Institute of African Studies (IAS) at…

    Acknowledgements
    Invocation
    Ancestral Roll-Call—Kofi Anyidoho
    Introduction; Back to the Future: The 1958 All Africa Peoples Conference (AAPC), the Current Conjuncture, and the Power of Optimism—
    Dzodzi Tsikata, Edem Adotey, and Mjiba Frehiwot
    Section 1
    1. Sixty Decades after the First All-African People’s Conference: Why Are Liberation and Transformation Still Lagging in Africa?—Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja
    2. Closing Presentation at the All-African Peoples Conference—Horace G. Campbell
    3. Pan-Africanism in Mwalimu Nyerere’s Thought—Issa Shivji
    4. Ghana (1957–1966): Reflections and Lessons From a Twentieth Century Pan-African Liberated Nation-State—D. Zizwe Poe
    5. Transnational Citizenship on the Borderlands: Towards Making (Non)Sense of National Borders in Africa—Edem Adotey
    6. Looking Backwards to Run Forward: A Critical Examination of the Sixtieth Anniversary of the 1958 All-African People’s Conference
    —Mjiba Frehiwot
    7. Generating Inclusive and Sustainable Growth: Challenging Neoliberal Approaches to Gender Mainstreaming in Regional Economic Integration in Africa—Adryan Wallace
    8. A Brief History of Development Initiatives in Africa —Anthony Yaw Baah
    9. Pan-African Epistemologies of Knowledge Production: A Deconstruction-Based Critical Reflection—James Dzisah and Michael Kpessa-Whyte
    10. Hip-Hop Studies as a Model for Anti-Imperialist Research in Africa—Msia Kibona Clark
    Section 2
    1. Centring Youth, Women, and Working People in Africa’s Struggle for Liberation—Dzodzi Tsikata
    2. Solidarity Message Former President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki
    3. Solidarity Message Deputy Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Kwesi Quartey
    4. Our Faith in Our Future is not Without Basis —Akilagpa Sawyerr
    5. Speaking With History G. A. Balogun with Edem Adotey
    Section 3
    1. Background Paper
    2. The Arts at the AAPC @ 60—Eric Tei-Kumadoe and Edem Adotey
    3. Issues and Recommendations
    Exhortation
    De Geas of Rickydoc: an Exhortation —Arthur Rickydoc Flowers
    List of Contributors

    Book Format

    Print Book

    Customer Reviews

    There are no reviews yet.

    Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.