The latest volume of the IAS Journal – Nokoko has just published. Volume 8 of Nokoko focuses on Ifá among the Yorùbá People of Nigeria, Climate-Induced Human Migration, Africa’s Extractive Sector Kenya, Mineral Wealth, Legislation Facilitating Inclusive Development, the Role and Influence of Media in Creating Environmental Awareness in Dar es Salaam Tanzania and concludes with two book reviews.
This latest issue of Nokoko continues its strength of providing an academic space for seasoned and new scholars, practitioners and cultural producers, providing new insights while pushing new boundaries on multiple areas of interest and concern within African Studies.
Nokoko is an open-access journal promoting dialogue, discourse and debate on PanAfricanism, Africa, and Africana. Nokoko brings forward the foundational work of Professor Daniel Osabu-Kle and his colleagues when they started the Journal of PanAfrican Wisdom in 2005. ‘Nokoko’ is a Ga word that means something that is new, novel, surprising and interesting. The journal offers a venue for scholarship to challenge enduring simplified views of Africa and the African diaspora, by providing other perspectives and insights that may be surprising, interesting, and refreshing.
Combining spaces for academic and community reflection, Nokoko creates an opportunity for discussion of research that reflects on the complicated nature of pan African issues. It provides a forum for the publication of work from a cross disciplinary perspective that reflects scholarly endeavour, policy discussions, practitioners’ reflections, and social activists’ thinking concerning the continent and beyond.
Hosted by the Institute of African Studies at Carleton University (in Ottawa, Canada), Nokoko provides a space for emerging and established scholars to publish their work on Africa and the African diaspora.
The latest volume can be viewed here Nokoko Volume 8. while previous issues can be accessed using this link – Nokoko Journals