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African Studies in the United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

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Extract

African Studies in the United States are alive, well and still growing despite lower increases in the level of goverment and institutional funding since the period of rapid growth in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Although some institutions have experienced sharp declines in funding or personnel, many have increased their Africanist activities in recent year. African Studies still are not a high priority in the American educational system. There is a wide gap between what Africanists consider to be essential information about Africa and what is actually known and taught about the continent in the U.S. Certainly there is room for expansion and improvement of existing academic teaching and research programs. Nevertheless, African Studies have made substantial advances in'the last 25 years and are still developing.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1985

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References

Data in the following discussion were compiled from Duffy, David and Jacobs, Barbara, compilers, Directory of Third World Studies in the United States (Waltham, Mass: Crossroads Press, 1981). This directory was compiled from responses to questionnaires so it probably does not include all Third World Studies Programs in the United States. A new edition will probably be published in 1986.Google Scholar
Michael, F. Lofchie, “Africa” in Beyond Growth: The Next Stage in Language and Area Studies, Richard D. Lambert, ed (Washington, D.C.:Association of American Universities, 1984. pp. 400-401).Google Scholar
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Lambert, pp. 9-10.Google Scholar
Ibid, pp 267-269.Google Scholar
These individuals are listed in Carter, Gwendolen M., The Founding of the African Studies Association, African Studies Review 26, 3/4 (1983) 7.Google Scholar
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Letter from Peter Gutkind, C.W. in African Studies Newsletter 12,5/6 (1979)1.Google Scholar
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