ECAS7
The Centre for African Studies Basel and the Swiss Society for African Studies welcome you to the 7th European Conference on African Studies ECAS 2017 with the theme: Urban Africa - Urban Africans: New encounters of the rural and the urban, which they organise on behalf of the Research Network of African Studies Centres in Europe AEGIS.
We expect over 1500 participants presenting 1046 papers in 204 thematic
panels and engaging in 10 round table discussions, 18 book launches, 13
film screenings and 13 meetings and who will be inspired by 4 keynote
lectures.
The timetable is now set and shows the chronological listing of all activities. Delegates can identify the detailed information on time and venue of their respective panel, paper, filmsession, booklaunch or meeting via the respecitve list, while the calendar in the Navigation Bar displays an overview of the programme..
Arts and Culture Programme
A rich arts programme established in partnership with the African Studies community of Basel will make your sojourn in Basel a unique experience. It features the A* Piece of Street Festival, the Festival Kongo am Rhein, the Image Afrique Festival '17, the exhibitions Images of Current Affairs - Press Photography and Archives in Africa, Making Douala 2007-2017, and Stolen Moments - Namibian Music History Untold, the Tinga Tinga Cinema and Bar, walking tours on Africa and Basel, as well as concerts with Jazz from South Africa.
The A* Magazine – A* standing for Art, Africa and Analysis – is the official publication of the ECAS arts and culture programme. It takes the form of a once-off newspaper that, in addition to providing a programme overview, features a broad spectrum of articles, analyses, features, interviews, letters and poems related to the many questions and issues raised during these events.
Registration
Online registration will close on 15 June 2017. If you have not done so
please register now! From 15 June on you
may no longer book the lunch option nor the conference dinner.
Venue
ECAS 2017 will be held at the main building of the University of Basel
(Kollegienhaus,
Petersplatz 1, 4051 Basel), which is located at a 5-minutes bus
ride from the railway station. Your booking at a Basel hotel includes
free public transport on the city perimeter. On our accommodation page we provide a
link and hints for booking your hotel. The recommended dates of travel
are 28 June 2017 and 2 July 2017 for arrival and departure respectively.
Organisers
The Centre for African Studies Basel is a coordinated research network at the University of Basel including further institutions such as the Basler Afrika Bibliographien, Mission 21 or the Swiss Tropic and Public Health Institute. It promotes Africa-related teaching at the university and offers MA and PhD programmes in African Studies as well as an advanced studies Certificate in African Affairs. With its joint research theme Living the City the Centre has been at the forefront of research on urban Africa. Research under this theme is promoted along five axes of research: Public Health and Social Life; Media and Imagination; Knowledge Production and Transfer; Governance and Civil Society; Environment and Development. These axes also inform the teaching activities of the Centre. The Centre today constitutes a solid framework within which numerous post-doc researchers as well as doctoral and MA students have been engaging with urban issues. This has led to the founding of a new master programme Critical Urbanism in cooperation with the University of Cape Town.
The Swiss Society for African Studies (SSAS) aims at advancing research on Africa, including the organization of conferences to discuss questions of African lifestyles and other aspects of African societies and cultures. Contributing to the circulation of relevant information, the SSAS understands itself as platform for synergies and collaboration between universities and research institutions. It strives to enhance the visibility and the institutionalization of African Studies in Switzerland. Founded in 1974, the SSAS is based on the model of Area Studies. With this view it offers opportunities to connect researchers and the interested public in a theme-oriented and multidisciplinary exchange. Alternating with thematic conferences, the biannual Swiss Researching Africa Days promote the exchange among researchers at different stages of their careers. The SSAS is a member of the Swiss Academy of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Conference Committee
The organising committee is led by Till Foerster, Elisio Macamo and Veit Arlt of the Centre for African Studies Basel.Conference Office
Veit Arlt (lead, logistics, website)Julia Büchele (administration)
Pascal Schmid (finances, communication, travel grants)
Jacob Geuder (organisation of student staff)
Nicole Bolliger (travel)
Rita Kesselring (publishers' exhibition)
Winnie Kanyimba (film sessions)
A*magazine: Art, Africa, Analysis
Kadiatou Diallo (editor and curator A* Piece of Street Festival)Melanie Boehi (editor)
Daniela Müller, Moritz Köhler, with Talya Lubinsky
and New Horizon Productions (design)
Partners are featured on the A* Magazine website
Scientific Committee
Till Förster (University of Basel, Switzerland)Dominique Malaquais (CNRS/IMAF, Paris, France)
Elísio Macamo (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Julia Tischler (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Anne Mayor (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Daniel Küenzler (University of Fribourg, Switzerland)
Gregor Dobler (University of Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany)
Programme Committee
Gareth Austin (University of Cambridge, England)
Susann Baller (DHIP-CREPOS, Dakar, Senegal)
Rose-Marie Beck (University of Leipzig)
Eva Maria Belser (University of Fribourg)
Wim van Binsbergen (African Studies Centre, Leiden, Netherlands)
Gilles Carbonnier (The Graduate Institute, Geneva, Switzerland)
Divine Fuh (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Olivier Graefe (University of Fribourg)
Clemens Greiner (University of Cologne, Germany)
Andreas Heuser (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Daniel Küenzler (University of Fribourg, Switzerland)
Paul Lane (University of Uppsala, Sweden)
Christine Lequelec-Cottier (University of Lausanne)
Dominique Malaquais (CNRS/IMAF, Paris, France)
Jenny Fatou Mbaye (City University London, England)
Sonia Merten (Swiss Tropic and Public Health Institute, Basel,
Switzerland)
Brigit Obrist (University of Basel)
Silke Oldenburg (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Jean Bernard Ouédraogo (CNRS-EHESS, Paris, France)
Didier Péclard (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Rüdiger Seesemann (University of Bayreuth, Switzerland)
Fiona Siegenthaler (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Céline Thiriot (Sciences Po, Bordeaux, France)



