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African studies in the Netherlands: A brief survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

J. Abbink*
Affiliation:
African Studies Centre (Leiden) and the Free University in Amsterdam; Netherlands Association for African Studies (NVAS)
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Extract

In the Netherlands there is an active community of Africanist scholars, numbering about 200 to 250. They work mainly in universities and other research institutes, but also in increasing numbers for government ministries (notably of Foreign Affairs and Development Co-operation), NGOs, and other aid organisations. Fields in which Africanists are strong are history, anthropology and geography, and to a lesser extent development sociology, medical science, law, comparative politics and religious studies. The following survey is necessarily a selective one.

African Studies in the Netherlands can pride itself on a long history only if we include the many travellers, traders and missionaries active in African regions before the twentieth century. The scholarly study of the continent seriously started a few decades later than in other European countries: after the Second World War, when an Africa Institute was founded (in 1946, see below) and the first special professorial chair in African ethnology was instituted at Leiden University.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Research & Documentation 2001

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References

Kloos, P. Into Africa. Dutch anthropology and the changing colonial situation. Antropologische Verkenningen (Utrecht) 11(1), 1992 pp. 49-64.Google Scholar
Van Binsbergen, W., ed. De maatschappelijke betekenis van het Afrika-onderzoek in deze tijd. Leiden, Werkgemeenschap Afrika, 1993. 108 p.Google Scholar
Veth, P.J. & Kan., CM. Bibliografie van Nederlandsche boeken, brochures, kaarten enz., over Afrika. Utrecht, Beijers, 1876. 98 p.Google Scholar