07.- 11.06.
2021

RT 02:Providing Nuanced, Yet Coherent Assessments? Challenges for Social Science Research on Africa

 

Providing Nuanced, Yet Coherent Assessments? Challenges for Social Science Research on Africa

Julia Grauvogel, GIGA Institute for African Affairs
Panelists: Leonardo Arriola (UC Berkeley), Matthias Basedau (GIGA Institute for African Affairs), Ulf Engel (Leipzig University), Anke Hoeffler (University of Konstanz), Julia Leininger (German Development Institute)

 

Short abstract:

African Studies have challenged simplifying perceptions about the continent by exploring multifaceted realities. Yet, there is also political demand for coherent assessments. The roundtable will discuss challenges for social science research on Africa in light of current trends and constraints.

Long abstract:

The public image of sub-Saharan Africa is dominated by civil conflicts, corruption, poverty and diseases. Social science research on Africa has sought to challenge such oversimplifying perceptions by exploring multifaceted realities on the African continent. Current debates about “the return of the single-country study” (Pepinsky 2019) provide a fertile ground for advancing such nuanced micro perspectives. At the same time, scholars are often confronted with a (political) demand for coherent explanations of persisting political, social and economic challenges. This round table explores how social science research on Africa has developed in the context of such – diverging or even contradictory – stimuli. The participants will compare and contrast research on Africa in the German,
European and US context from these different perspectives. They will pay particular attention to the following questions: To what extent have scholars working on Africa challenged popular perceptions of the African continent? Can and should these differentiated assessments add up to a big picture? How have African Studies responded to and/or shaped current trends in the social sciences such as a renewed emphasis on case studies and a focus on causal inference? What are ethical implications of different approaches towards social science research on Africa? Which role do institutional
constrains and incentives play in shaping research on Africa?

Panel:

Wisdom Akpalu is the Dean of the School of Research and Graduate Studies at Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration

Leonardo Arriola is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for African Studies at the University of California, Berkeley

Matthias Basedau is Director of the GIGA Institute of African Affairs

Ulf Engel is a professor of “Politics in Africa” at the Institute of African Studies in Leipzig

Anke Hoeffler a Professor of Development Research at the Department of Politics & Public Administration at the University of Konstanz

Julia Leininger is the Head of the Research Programme Transformation of Political (Dis-)order at the German Development Institute

Chair: Julia Grauvogel is a Senior Research Fellow at the GIGA Institute of African Affairs

 

 

June 8 @ 16:30
16:30 — 18:00 (1h 30')

Zoom Room 2

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