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Category ArchiveFellowship

2018 RESOLVE Network Lake Chad Basin Fellowships – NOW OPEN!!

2018 RESOLVE Network Lake Chad Basin Fellowships

Application Deadline: 15 September 2017

The RESOLVE Network is soliciting applications from qualified candidates based in Cameroon, Chad, and Nigeria for a project-based research fellowship in support of a comparative country case study on the rise of violent extremism and the politics of religion in education in the Lake Chad Basin region. Supported by the RESOLVE Network Secretariat in Washington, D.C., the project will be led by a select team of principal investigators with experience in the region who will work closely with fellows in the program to conduct field based research over the course of 10 months from early November 2017 through late September 2018.

Fellowship Description: http://resolvenet.org/2017/08/01/sept-15-2017-application-deadline-resolve-network-2018-research-leadership-fellowships-in-lake-chad-basin/

Fellowship Application Form: http://resolvenet.org/2017/08/01/resolve-network-2018-research-leadership-fellowships-in-lake-chad-basin-application-form-and-instructions/

Ideas Matter Fellowships & WARC Travel Grants Now Open

Applications for the Ideas Matter Doctoral Fellowship for West African scholars are now open for the 2018 year.  Applications close October 10th.

For more information, please click here.

The Ideas Matter Doctoral Fellowship is open to doctoral students under age 35 who are based in West African institutions of higher education, for research on the continent. Priority will be given to research projects focusing on women, technology and entrepreneurship.

Submit your application online here.

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Also, WARC Travel Grant applications are still open!

More information can be found here.

Submit that application online here.

Fall 2018 WARC Travel Grant Applications Now Open

Applications open now!

Application ends: Saturday, September 15.

The WARC Travel Grant supports West African post graduate scholars and researchers carrying out research in West Africa. Studies in all disciplines are welcome. This grant covers travel taking place between December 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019.
For more information about the grant visit our website:
Complete your application using the link below:

Please share with your contacts!

Congratulations to the Winners of the 2018 WARA Fellowship Competition!!

WARA is happy announce the following winners of the 2018 WARA Fellowship competition:

Post-doctoral Fellowship
  • Connor Ryan (University of the West Indies) “`Lagos Never Spoils’: Nollywood and Nigerian Media Urbanism.”
  • Anima Adjepong (Simmons College) “From `little Lagos’ to Accra’s Artist Scene.”
Pre-doctoral Fellowship
  • Alfredo Rojas (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) “Moral Agriculture: Environmental Change, Society and Local Food Production in Niamasso Ivory Coast.”
  • Ryan Carty (Michigan State University) “Trading Technologies: Hausa Communities in a Borderland, 1850-1914.”
  • Janice Levi (University of California, Los Angeles) “Whispers in the West: The Emergence of a Jewish Community in 20th century Ghana.”
  • Tyler Hook (University of Wisconsin, Madison) “The Corporation and the Community: Local Stakeholders Engagement with International Corporate School Management Chains in Liberia.”
  • Andrea Walther-Puri (Tufts Fletcher School) “Measuring the Impact of U.S. Military Counter-Terrorism Assistance in West Africa.”
Residency Fellowship
  • Nonso Obikili (American University) to conduct a large-scale study of taxation in Lagos at American University.
WARC Library Fellow
  • Justin Miller (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign) for summer fellowship at the WARC Library in Dakar.

2018 WARA Fellowship Announcement

WARA Fellowship Applications

Applications for the 2018 WARA Fellowship competition are now open! Applications found here! The submission deadline is February 1, 2018.

The WARA Pre-Doctoral Fellowship is open to U.S. citizens who are currently enrolled in graduate programs at institutions of higher education in the United States to conduct research in West Africa during the summer of 2018.

The WARA Post-Doctoral Fellowship is open to U.S citizens already holding a Ph.D. who are currently affiliated with an academic institution or who work in another related domain and would like to conduct research in West Africa.

The WARC Library Fellowship is designed to provide experience in West Africa for practicing librarians and for the next generation of Africana librarians. Open to U.S citizens, this fellowship provides round trip travel to Dakar and a stipend of $2,500 to cover the cost of living during the summer of 2018.

The WARA Residency Fellowship offers residencies for WARA member institutions to host a West African Scholar on their campus.

Funding for this activity provided by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State through a grant from the Council of American Overseas Research Centers.

Valerie Delali Adjoh-Davoh on Her WARA Residence Fellowship at Harvard University

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(Ms. Adjoh-Davoh at Harvard University)

My name is Valerie Delali Adjoh-Davoh. I am a Doctoral candidate at the Department of History, University of Cape Coast. The title of my research is “Pawnship in the Gold Coast Colony: Pawn Child Labour in the Period of the Cash Crop Revolution 1874-1940”. The thrust of the research is that market forces after abolition of domestic slavery in 1874 coupled with the introduction of cocoa in the 1890s intensified the use of pawn children in production and export of cocoa until the establishment of Ghana’s Cocoa Marketing Board in 1938. In addition, the work gives understanding to the present use of children in cocoa production in order to curtail it due to the International Labour Organisation’s laws to eliminate the worst forms of child labour in developing countries by 2016.

My fellowship abroad was to conduct research at Harvard University libraries which included: the Houghton library and the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library. Also, the fellowship was intended to collaborate with Professor Emmanuel Akyeampong and other scholars interested in forms of unfree labour which included pawnship.

I arrived in Boston on July 2, 2017 where I was warmly received by the fellows and events officer, Rosaline Salifu, of the Harvard Center for African Studies. Since I arrived on a Sunday and July 4, 2017 was a public holiday I had to settle in and formally report to Harvard Center for African Studies on July 5, 2017. I met with my faculty sponsor, Professor Emmanuel Akyeampong, on July 6, 2017. We discussed issues regarding publication of my work when completed, introduction of researchers or scholars in the area of unfree labour, requirements for international publication of both books and articles, and my use of the Harvard University libraries. Also, Professor Akyeampong made useful contributions to my work since he is an expert on forms of unfree labour.

Meetring Prof Akyeampong on JULY 6TH 001

(Ms. Adjoh-Davoh met Prof. Akyeampong on July 6th, 2017)

Through the fellowship I was able to obtain over fifty books and articles from the use of the Harvard University libraries. These included literature on anti-slavery movement, abolition and the end of slavery, pawning among the Fante of the Gold Coast, and child labour. Harvard University also has a franchise which allows its researchers to access dissertations world Wide via ProQuest dissertation in my area of study which hitherto were unavailable to me. These materials will go a long way to enrich my dissertation, later research and teaching generally.

The Harvard University online Archive was useful in gathering pictorial representations of some events in the Gold Coast. These pictures reflected events such as the 1874 Anglo-Asante War, colonialism, Market setting in Cape Coast in the colonial period, female fashion, and Fetishism during wars.

HARVARD ART MUSEUM

(Ms. Adjoh-Davoh at Harvard Art Museums)

I benefited from my visit to the Harvard Art Museum. At the Harvard Art Museum I had the opportunity of being taken through various artifacts on Africa, the Muslim world, Christianity and other world religions. I was provided with firsthand information on most of the cultures which gives a better understanding to the theoretical aspects of what I knew about other world religions.

Also, I had access to primary materials from the African Studies library within the Mugar Memorial Library, Boston University particularly on Ghana which is useful for my present research as well as later research and study. The primary materials ranged from topics on Ghana’s Cocoa Marketing Board and cocoa in general, Cocoa hold up in the Gold Coast, cocoa co-operatives, child rights in Ghana, agriculture in Ghana, land tenure and  Gold Coast annual reports from 1918 to 1954. Besides, these primary materials could be used for many other researches on Ghana.

As a result of the fellowship, I was introduced to a number of scholars in my field of research by Professor Emmanuel Akyeampong. These scholars are Professor Sandra Elaine Greene who is an expert on Ghana, Professor Gareth Austin who has researched extensively on Ghana and forms of unfree labour, and Professor Trevor Getz who has researched extensively on unfree labour after abolition in the Gold Coast. These professors provided useful suggestions to my research which I believe will go a long way to enrich my dissertation and later research.

Further, I was introduced to new primary research sources by my Faculty sponsor such as the Basel Mission Archives online that he compiled in the past to supplement the primary sources which were already available to me on pawnship. The Basel Archives online are especially useful since there are limited sources on pawnship and other forms of unfree labour in the Gold Coast in particular.

In addition, I received a compiled course pack as a gift from my research which to me was his demonstration of his commitment to see others excel and a mark of a good mentor which everyone would want to have in the early stages of their career.

On July 11, 2017 I visited the West African Research Association’s office at Boston University. I met Professor Jennifer Yanco (the immediate past Director of WARA) and Caroline Johnson (the Operations Manager of the West African Research Association). An interview was then conducted on my research and we deliberated generally on child labour. The interview conducted has given me some exposure and recognition regarding my research which I believe will open other opportunities in the future.

Thank you very much to Professor Emmanuel Akyeampong (Oppenheimer Chair of the Harvard Center for African Studies) for inviting me. I greatly appreciate his mentorship and suggestions to see my work progress. Also, I greatly appreciate the support of the staff of the Harvard Center for African Studies in their professionalism in handling my Harvard Id issues and having a fruitful research visit.

Finally, I am very grateful to the West African Research Association for the fellowship to conduct research at Harvard and Boston University libraries as well as collaborate with experts in my field of research. I believe the fellowship is a stepping stone to greater heights in my career as a lecturer and researcher. Therefore I am eternally grateful for the opportunity.

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