Introduction/Outline
The work examines first the subject of the origins of higher education in pre-modern Africa and the place of academic freedom in it, beginning from Egypt and referencing other universities that emerged in Ethiopia, the Empires of Mali and Songhay, Carthage (now Tunisia) and Morocco, among others. It affirms the presence of rudimentary forms of academic freedom in these institutions. Attention is next paid to university education in Europe and how this development, among other factors, contributed to the sidelining and eventual general demise of higher education institutions with their roots in pre-modern Africa. Factors accounting for this are explained, including the prosecution of the Old Imperialism agenda, driven by liberalism.
Next, the work attempts a contemporary definition of academic freedom and compares it with how academic freedom worked in the past. The next session discusses the alliance forged between the colonial authorities and the church to enable the latter to merge its christianising mission with the mission civilisatrice agenda of the former, culminating in the emergence of ‘mind colonialism’ or ‘intellectual imperialism’. This session also focuses on the rationale for the establishment of the colonial university after the initial unwillingness to do so. It further touches on how institutional autonomy was suppressed through the establishment of a suzerain relationship between the colonial and the metropolitan university while seeking to protect the academic freedom of academics most of whom were expatriate. Next, the work focuses on the four generations of constitution-making in Africa which saw a roller-coaster ride between application of liberal and illiberal democracies and the relationship established between democracy and academic freedom. The study ends by identifying the key elements of academic freedom from the African perspective, the extent to which it deviates from the liberal script and the actors/violators of academic freedom in Africa.
The pre-modern African university and the place of academic freedom in it
The university as a community of scholars, with an international outlook and cultural responsibilities, has been traced back to different institutions that developed in different parts of the continent of Africa in pre-modern timesFootnote 1 before their emergence in Europe. Ndlovu-Gatsheni contends that:
The ‘university in Africa’ has three genealogies if not ‘triple heritages’. The first is the precolonial African/Bantu/Nilotic/Arabic/Muslim genealogy. The precolonial genealogy speaks to the intellectual tradition of the Nile Valley Egyptian-Nubian-Ethiopian civilisation, the Afro-Arabic/Muslim intellectual tradition as well as the precolonial Mali-Songhai-Ghana Timbuktu intellectual tradition, which, taken together, produced the earliest universities on the African soil.Footnote 2
Specifically, Lulat mentions, among others, the Per-ankh (House of Light), established around 2000 BCE in Egypt, which had multiple functions as a scriptorium, training site and research institute. It provided higher education to both religious and secular scholars, including from the Mediterranean and Arabic worlds.Footnote 3 Next is the Biblioteca Alexandrina, which also attracted international scholars, including those who were recognised as ‘scholars in residence’ at the libraries which served as important seats of learning. According to Lionel Casson, these ancient universities paid scholars salaries and provided them free food and other support so that they would be able to devote more time to research and intellectual pursuits.Footnote 4 Biblioteca Alexandrina, however, suffered decline following the purging of intellectuals from Alexandria in 145BC by Ptolemy VIII Physcon. One may further mention Islamic universities which evolved later on in Egypt, such as the Al Azhar (tenth century) and University of Sankorey which thrived in the city of Timbuctoo, Mali, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.Footnote 5 Universities were also established in Tunisia (Ez-Zitouna in Tunis, at the end of the seventh century) and Ethiopia’s Metsahift Bet (School of the Holy Books). It is also important to mention Al Qarawwyin University in Fez, Morocco, established in 859AD and recognised by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the Guinness Book of Records as the oldest existing university in the world today.
Kwame Nkrumah, the first President of Ghana, confirms the history of university education in Africa by noting, at the opening ceremony of the faculty of law, University of Ghana in 1962,
… in opening these buildings we are reviving part of our African culture and heritage interrupted by the colonial period, and we are not embarking on any new venture. Long before the foundation of the universities of the European continent, from which the modern civil codes of Europe have been evolved and long before the establishment of the universities and Inns of Court in the United Kingdom where common law was taught and developed, law schools existed on African soil.Footnote 6
The presence and functioning of higher education in different parts of Africa epitomised recognition of, and respect for, a rudimentary or de facto form of academic freedom. Instances of de facto academic freedom were reflected in the practice of academic mobility and intellectual exchanges among scholars.Footnote 7 Mazrui also talks about the Islamic doctrine of ijtihad – the right to analyse and formulate one’s own thoughts and conclusions on a legal, moral or intellectual issue – which was practised in the Islamic universities, including those in Africa.Footnote 8 He further recognises truth-seeking in these institutions when he called for a university being true to its classical vision, as the home of the scholar ‘fascinated by ideas’.Footnote 9 This view is confirmed by Dubois who writes that
An entire class of the population was devoted to the study of letters, being called fakirs or sheiks by the old manuscripts, and marabuts (holy men) … these pious and cultured families of Timbuctoo lived within the precincts of the mosque of Sankore … they were held in high esteem by both dignitaries and people. The Songhoi kings pensioned the most celebrated, and they received many gifts, especially in the month of Ramadan.Footnote 10
That is to say, the purpose of university education embraced by these institutions was dedicated to the pursuit of truth through systematic inquiry, to provide education to the students and to apply knowledge generated to respond to societal needs. Thus, Dubois notes that professors (sheiks) were consulted on a regular basis by the political leadership for their opinions which were highly regarded as authoritative sources for solutions to problems facing the society.
During its early years, these institutions focused on religious education, which later expanded into linguistics, grammar, law, music, Sufism, medicine, astronomy, numerology and metallurgy, among others. Also, according to Alemu, a common characteristic of these pre-modern African education systems was that they trained religious and secular leaders together without separating religion from politics while ensuring that higher education systems had social relevance.Footnote 11
Nkrumah, additionally, notes that the teaching of law in West African universities, such as Sankorey in Timbuktu, Fez and Cairo, was influenced by the Maliki school of legal thought which established the principle of linking law to social progress. He said African thinkers believed in law as being part of religion which should serve all men equally. He refers to Ibn Khaldun, described as a ‘great African scholar who was also a distinguished lawyer and a Malikite chief justice in Cairo’ who postulated that the development of law should involve and have the support of the people and, therefore, should be based upon what he called ‘social solidarity’.Footnote 12
Some have argued that academic freedom is of recent origin; therefore, one cannot talk of academic freedom having developed in universities in pre-modern societies. Speaking about rights generally, Donnelly, for example, contends that ‘no society, civilization, or culture prior to the seventeenth century, however, had a widely endorsed practice, or even vision, of equal and inalienable individual human rights’.Footnote 13 Therefore, one cannot talk about academic freedom in pre-modern universities, even if such universities existed. However, the idea of rights is reflected in the culture of different societies around the globe. These ideas of rights, like natural rights, are inherent in the human person, are inalienable, universal and fundamental.Footnote 14 Therefore, the concept of rights emerged with human beings and the creation of human societies in different parts of the world. Depending on the customs and cultural practices of a particular people, these natural rights were developed in reaction to attempts by economic and political elites in those societies to suppress them.Footnote 15 Ishay traces previous incarnations of rights to demonstrate how ‘[t]he spirit of human rights has been transmitted consciously and unconsciously from one generation to another’. She argues further that by tracking back to ancient times, it is observed that ‘each great religion contains important humanistic elements that anticipated our modern conceptions of rights’.Footnote 16 Thus, it is safe to confirm the presence of de facto academic freedom in the pre-modern African universities.
Emergence of universities in Europe and their impact on African universities
Despite the above historical narrative, Europe has maintained that academic freedom emanated from Bologna, around the time of the Enlightenment, and later spread to other regions of the world through European contact.Footnote 17 The meaning of academic freedom, therefore, is said to be located within liberalism.Footnote 18
However, university education took off in Bologna in 1088, with Oxford (around 1096), Salamanca (1134) and Paris (1160), among others, in that order. Rightly so, Europe can claim a modern access to the university and academic freedom and not its pre-modern form. Karran describes Europe as ‘the cradle of the modern idea of academic freedom within a research university’.Footnote 19 [Emphasis added]. Karran also indicates that academic freedom ‘arose from, and contributed to, the development of the university in Europe during the 11th and 12th Centuries’.Footnote 20 Karran, therefore, admits the presence of prior versions of academic freedom and university education before Europe came into the picture.
Formalisation of the powers and duties of the European institutions of higher learning started with the famous Authentica Habita enacted by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in 1155, which provided protection for scholars travelling to new seats of learning.Footnote 21 Karran also talks about the fact that academic freedom emerged from the concept of libertas philosophandi, used by Tommaso Campanella in his 1622 defence of Galileo.Footnote 22 However, even within the European tradition, academic freedom could not have emerged that late, considering that academic freedom goes in tandem with higher education. What is clear, however, is that academic freedom did not emerge in Europe simply to facilitate knowledge production but also to challenge orthodoxy and to speak truth to power, especially against the Catholic Church.Footnote 23 Thus, Kerr contends that knowledge, as perhaps the most common powerful element in the culture of a society, has the potency to affect ‘the rise and fall of professions and even of social classes, of regions and even of nations’.Footnote 24
In support of Karran, Dea attributes the origins of academic freedom to the universities founded in the Middle East and North Africa, which, she writes ‘fostered remarkable diversity in scholarly approaches’.Footnote 25 However, she argues that ‘the concept of academic freedom was not codified there’ because these institutions were destroyed in later centuries by European colonisation,Footnote 26 which leads her to the conclusion that academic freedom as we have it today is a European idea. Dea asserts that these institutions were responsible for developing ‘de facto academic freedom’.Footnote 27
Among countries in Europe that played a critical role in the evolution of academic freedom is Prussia, led by Wilhelm von Humboldt who is credited with developing the classical understandings of academic freedom: lernfreiheit (learning freedom) – students’ freedom to choose where (which university) and what (courses) to study. The other is lehrfreiheit (teaching freedom) – the professor’s freedom to teach and conduct research without interference from the state. These freedoms, however, were to be enjoyed exclusively within the confines of the university and not in the civil sphere. It is interesting to note that this theory was accepted and applied where imperial rule was the mode of governance at the time. Other cardinal tenets of academic freedom enunciated by Humboldt included the notion of the unity of teaching and research (Einheit von Lehre und Forschung) and the unity of science and scholarship (Einheit der Wissenschaft), which together constitute the theoretical and organisational paradigm which became the hallmark of the modern research university in Europe.Footnote 28
The emergence of European academic freedom was at the expense of denigration and decimation of the knowledge base of Africans perpetrated through the application of ‘colonial science’. Colonial science refers to practices developed and implemented by colonial powers that enabled them to use their colonies as ‘living laboratories’ and to treat non-Western participants as ‘others’ in order to advance colonialism and trigger colonisation of knowledge.Footnote 29 Consequently, African societies were classified as traditional with no scientific base and, therefore, only good at producing raw materials to feed the industries of Europe,Footnote 30 hence, the postulation and application of theories such as mercantilism and ultimately, capitalism.Footnote 31 After realising this goal, Mazrui and Ajayi argue that Europe adopted a deliberate policy designed to maintain and widen the science and technology gap they managed to create between them and the colonies.Footnote 32 Thus, Houtondji contends that scientific activity and know-how were clearly generated along the same lines as the economies of the subject countries, where:
Lacking up-to-date laboratories and research centres, the colony served as a storehouse of raw facts and information to be exported to Europe, where they were processed, analysed, interpreted, integrated into the Western scientific heritage, and subsequently re-exported to other countries, including the colony itself, in the form of finished products of scientific and technological research.Footnote 33
In conclusion, Africa became one of those epistemic sites that experienced not only colonial genocides but also ‘theft of history’, epistemicides and linguicides.Footnote 34
Contemporary understanding of academic freedom
Definition of academic freedom is influenced, first, by the purpose of the university and, second, by the stakeholders in the academic freedom equation. Regarding the first, it is acknowledged from our historical overview from the African and European contexts that the primary purpose of the university is truth-seeking and knowledge production.Footnote 35 The second is the application of knowledge to educate students to develop critical minds. The third is the application of knowledge to solve societal problems and to advance human progress; and, fourthly, the use of knowledge to challenge orthodoxy and governmental excesses.
The pursuit of these noble objectives by the academic community has often conflicted with the goals of government or has involved attempts by the State to control the process. This explains the eternal tension and struggle by the powers-that-be to suppress and control knowledge production and its expression. Another tension relates to how to determine the problems of a society and how these problems can or should be solved. In other words, the tension and the conflict relate to self-determination – that is, whether knowledge production should be subordinate to political and economic demands dictated to by the State or whether academia should be in charge of the definition and pursuit of such societal objectives.Footnote 36
Regarding the second factor influencing a definition of academic freedom, it is observed that sometimes, academic freedom is defined narrowly to reflect the concerns of a particular stakeholder only, most often academics and the university and less with reference to students.Footnote 37 This is not out of place as there are the specific/narrow as well as general meanings of academic freedom. A specific type limits the definition to one of the members of the academic community, while a general one covers all the stakeholders in the academic freedom equation.
The UNESCO Recommendations on the Status of Higher Education Teaching Personnel,Footnote 38 for example, refers to two specific definitions relating to academics and the university. Paragraph 27 of the document recognises academic freedom for academics by providing as follows:
Higher-education teaching personnel are entitled to the maintaining of academic freedom, that is to say, the right, without constriction by prescribed doctrine, to freedom of teaching and discussion, freedom in carrying out research and disseminating and publishing the results thereof, freedom to express freely their opinion about the institution or system in which they work, freedom from institutional censorship and freedom to participate in professional or representative academic bodies.
Regarding institutional autonomy or the academic freedom of the university, it provides under paragraph 17 thus:
Autonomy is that degree of self-governance necessary for effective decision making by institutions of higher education regarding their academic work, standards, management and related activities consistent with systems of public accountability, especially in respect of funding provided by the state, and respect for academic freedom and human rights.
Academic freedom for students, however, is only indirectly inferred to in the Recommendation, from the duties imposed on academics and the university in their relations with students.Footnote 39
Based on the purpose and the stakeholder elements, the right to academic freedom is defined as a claim, privilege, power or immunity uniquely carved out for the academic community – made up of the university, academics and students – in order to enable scientific enquiry and the dissemination of its findings through teaching, publication and other means, as well as the application of these findings to promote human welfare. This freedom is exercised within the limits of public order, professional ethics and social responsibility, without restraint or threat of sanction by governments and other power brokers.
Thus, generally speaking, academic freedom is a facilitator and guarantor for the generation, dissemination, application and protection of knowledge.Footnote 40
Unlike the situation with most rights and freedoms where there is a straight-forward identification of the duty-bearer (the State) and the citizens as the rights-holders,Footnote 41 academic freedom stands out as a unique freedom where the rights-holders are also secondary duty-bearers in the academic freedom equation. The duties applicable to the State are the duty to respect, protect and fulfil. In its application to academic freedom, the duty to respect academic freedom includes the duty not to do anything that will impair the rights and freedoms of the rights-holders as specifically defined for them. The duty to protect carries with it the adoption of preventive measures to ensure that third parties (including external actors – international financial institutions, some universities and scholars from the Global North and corporate institutions) do not abuse the rights accorded the rights-holders in the academic freedom equation. Where violations do occur, the duty-bearers are expected to investigate and punish the perpetrators. The duty to fulfill calls for a variety of strategies, including provision of facilities and funding for activities such as research, learning and dissemination of knowledge, among others.
The duties that the State assumes to enable the university to enjoy its right, as indicated in the UNESCO Recommendation, for example, include the assurance that its decision to set up and fund a university will fall in line with the generally recognised functions of a university. Also, that States will protect higher education institutions from threats to their autonomy coming from any other source.Footnote 42 The university, in turn, bears duties towards academics and students and derives its capacity to perform its duties on the ability and willingness of the State to respect, protect and fulfil the rights owed it (the university). Academics also owe duties to students, in that order.
The Colonial University (1827–1957)
Old Imperialism is responsible for the denigration and decimation of indigenous knowledges and epistemic injusticeFootnote 43 and the destruction of Africa’s pre-modern university education system and knowledge base. New Imperialism (1833–1914), on its part, is accountable for introducing mind colonialism (or intellectual imperialism)Footnote 44 entangled in christianisation and the mission civilisatrice. Mind colonialism had a twofold mission – to legitimise the illegalities of physical colonialism while entrenching the ideology of racial inferiority among the colonised people. Therefore, it formed a critical angle of the colonial project and is responsible for influencing the colonial policy of not supporting the setting up of higher education in Africa.Footnote 45
Consequently, at the time of independence, only eighteen universities existed in Africa. These can be divided into four types. One, missionary education, the Fourah Bay College being a good example. Considered to be the first western-style university to be built in sub-Saharan Africa, Fourah Bay was established in 1827 by Anglican missionaries to train theologians and schoolteachers. It was affiliated with Durham University, England.Footnote 46
The second is the settler colonial university system set up by settler coloniesFootnote 47 to promote higher education for citizens from the metropolis and to train them to further the colonial agenda in those colonies. Such a rationale informed the establishment of the University of Cape Town (UCT) (1829), Stellenbosch University (1903) and the University of Pretoria (1909) in South Africa. University of Fort Hare seems to be the exception as it was established for Blacks in South Africa. Mandela, Tutu, Tambo and other African nationalist from parts of the continent had the opportunity to be trained there. However, Fort Hare, which started as the South African Native College in 1916, had ‘religious tradition at the heart of Fort Hare’s origin’ and the form of education was ‘undeniably Eurocentric’. It operated in an environment of racial segregation even before the obnoxious apartheid system was institutionalised. The takeover of the college in 1959–1960 by the National Party government reduced Fort Hare to the level of ‘Bush Colleges’ that were instituted in many homelands.Footnote 48
This discriminatory apartheid policy led to UCT’s enunciation of the concept of academic freedom through TB Davie as part of its anti-apartheid policy on education. Davie noted that academic freedom involves ‘four essential freedoms … [for the university] to determine for itself on academic grounds who may teach, what may be taught, how it shall be taught and who may be admitted to study’.Footnote 49 However, UCT continued to benefit from the apartheid system of segregation in education. Similarly, in Algeria, the University of Algiers (set up in 1909) largely opened its doors to the French and other Europeans who, by the early twentieth century, formed a majority of Algiers’ population.
The third category is the universities set up in some of the few independent African countries of the time. For example, Liberia, having declared its independence from the American Colonization Society in 1847, set up the University of Liberia in 1862. Also, in 1889, the Cuttington University was established by the Episcopal Church of the United States, to cater to the needs of the mainly Americo-Liberian freed slaves. In Egypt, the Cairo University Egypt was opened as a small private institution in 1908 followed by the American University in Cairo in 1919 by the American Mission in Egypt, a Protestant mission sponsored by the United Presbyterian Church of North America.
The fourth is the latter-day universities created by the colonial enterprise when decolonisation became imminent, and the need was felt to develop a core of Europeanised elite to maintain, after colonialism, the politico-economic framework put in place by the colonial enterprise.Footnote 50 They include Makerere University in Uganda (1922), University of Ghana (1948), University of Ibadan, Nigeria (1948), and University of Zimbabwe (1952) by Britain. The French also established, among others, the Université Cheikh Anta Diop, which evolved from the Ecole de Médecine de Dakar. The Universities of Dakar, Yaoundé, Abidjan and Brazzaville were also created from French Universities established in the metropolis as their ‘African campuses’.Footnote 51 Later, Portugal set up the Agostinho Neto University Angola (as Estudos Gerais Universitários de Angola) and Eduardo Mondlane University, Mozambique (as Estudos Gerais Universitários de Moçambique), both in 1962.
These latter-day colonial universities reproduced the patterns characteristic of the metropolitan universities based on the establishment of a suzerain relationship, referred to as Special Relationship Scheme, with the former which essentially denied them of any form of institutional autonomy. Other forms of violations of academic freedom occurred, reflected in the application of the colonial curriculum, which were obviously not in tune with the needs of the newly independent African State. These practices affirmed a continuum in the perpetration of epistemic injustice against Africa.Footnote 52 Achille Mbembe describes such institutions as ‘local institutions of a dominant academic model based on a Eurocentric epistemic canon that attributes truth only to the Western way of knowledge production’. This model, he says, ‘disregards other epistemic traditions’.Footnote 53
An assessment of the purpose for the establishment of these colonial universities indicates that they strictly do not meet any of the four main purposes. Thus, Tierney and Langford, referring to Altbach, contend that these universities ‘were seen more as training grounds for jobs, particularly for the civil service sector, than as intellectual arenas engaged in the search and struggle for truth’.Footnote 54
Thus, self-determination was taken away from the colonial university to enable the pursuance of the colonial agenda of promoting colonial science and, thereby, widen the technology gap and advantage multinational corporations (MNCs) to exercise monopoly over Africa’s rich natural resources. As discussed above, the denial of self-determination constitutes a major means of suppressing academic freedom and the pattern has continued with the introduction of new actors, including the independent State.Footnote 55 Thus, in addition to being the main consumer of Africa’s mineral wealth, the Global North remains the main manager of that wealth as their MNCs, having a monopoly over scientific knowledge, seek to assert control over the exploration, exploitation, processing, manufacturing and marketing of Africa’s resources.Footnote 56
First generation of constitution-making in Africa and academic freedom (1957–mid-1960s)
The university has continued to play a critical role in ensuring the perpetuation of the colonial science agenda in Africa. In spite of the liberal script reflected in Africa’s independence constitutions – built around principles of liberal democracy, individual rights and rule of law, among others,Footnote 57 academic freedom was not specifically identified as a part. It was considered as having been embedded in the traditions of the colonial university.Footnote 58
In this first generation of constitution-making, Africa’s political leadership would adopt a conciliatory approach to embracing and accepting academic freedom within the university space as a means to improve greater harmony between university and government. Kwame Nkrumah, for example, is quoted as saying, ‘We know that the objectives of a university cannot be achieved without scrupulous respect for academic freedom, for without academic freedom there can be no university’.Footnote 59
In this generation, the African university remained colonised, and the academic freedom that existed was largely Eurocentric in outlook and mainly served the interest of the expatriate staff most of whom remained part of the ancien regime. They operated ‘under the cover of a false neutrality of academic scholarship, which permitted them to camouflage their ideological biases and the strategic policy implications of their work’. Ajayi also states that
To some extent, the politicians regarded the universities, dominated as they were by expatriate staff, as part of the apparatus of imperialism, comparable to multinational corporations, which had to be decolonized. To that extent, the politicians had the support of many African academics in their struggle to control and direct the universities. In what has been called “a destructive conflict,” it was the expatriate staff defending their established privileges who called for the defence of university autonomy and maintenance of universal standards while the African staff, many of whom felt alienated and discriminated against, tended to seek the intervention of politicians to give the universities a national character and ensure rapid Africanisation.Footnote 60
Without a doubt, there was the need to undertake a contextual relevance-based approach to promote higher education in Africa – to decolonise science. This was the opportunity for Africa’s nationalist leaders to go back to the norms that formed the rudiments of academic freedom in Africa’s pre-modern universities. Nkrumah hinted at that in his remarks noted above when opening the University of Ghana’s Institute of African Studies. However, these projects were only superficial.Footnote 61
From colonial to developmental university (mid-1960s–1990)
Post-independence African nationalist leaders began to jettison the liberal democratic ideal in place of one-party or no-party rule and military dictatorship, largely backed by the concept of African socialism.Footnote 62 The initiation of these measures introduced Africa into its second generation of constitution-making. The ideological underpinning of African socialism was that the idea of human rights was seen as an impediment to the realisation of the goals of development.
During this period, African leaders made serious attempts to set up new universities to augment the few inherited from colonialism.Footnote 63 They also made efforts to redesign the colonial universities so that, together with the new, both would become a crucial part of the development machinery of the State, as ‘developmental universities’.Footnote 64 The contestations about academic freedom in Africa took root here. Having spent a lot of money to set up universities, African governments expected universities to help the new nations to build up their capacity to develop and manage their resources, alleviate the poverty of the majority of their people and close the gap between them and the developed world. In the words of Dlamini, ‘[c]ertain African leaders expect more from universities than university autonomy and academic freedom — in particular they emphasise that universities should contribute to development’.Footnote 65 To realise this goal, institutional autonomy for most universities was seen as a stumbling block to development and got seriously compromised.Footnote 66
This posture led to the introduction of the illiberal science script which ‘emphasises the collective self-determination of society at the detriment of the self-determination of academia’,Footnote 67 the incorporation of the university into the organic structure of the one-party structure and the institutionalisation of party control over the day-to-day affairs of the university.Footnote 68 It also ruptured the relationship between the nationalist intellectuals and the political intellectuals, as the former began to question the agenda of the latter. Consequently, the academic community became vulnerable targets of State repression.Footnote 69
Also during this period, the exercise of ‘internal colonialism’ came to the fore, that is the application of vestiges of colonial power or the reproduction and application of colonial power and the endorsement of epistemic violence by the independent State.Footnote 70 This practice has contributed to the creation of coloniality of higher education in Africa which refers to long-standing patterns of power relations ensuing from colonialism and contributing to define knowledge production, culture, labour and inter-subjective relations.Footnote 71 The coloniality of higher education, in turn, has contributed to defining the actors and factors responsible for influencing the state of academic freedom in Africa.
Neoliberalism, the Bretton Woods institutions and academic freedom
The post-colonial attack on academic freedom in African universities has been waged by the independent African State in conjunction with international actors such as the Bretton Woods institutions – the World Bank (WB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and some resource-endowed universities of the Global North in the name of internationalisation and by multinational corporations through controlled research funding.Footnote 72
The Bretton Woods institutions are structured on neoliberalism and
characterized in terms of its belief in sustained economic growth as the means to achieve human progress, its confidence in free markets as the most-efficient allocation of resources, its emphasis on minimal state intervention in economic and social affairs, and its commitment to the freedom of trade and capital.Footnote 73
Under the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) introduced by these financial institutions in response to the economic downturn that African States faced in the 1970s, the continent was subjected to a rigid and stringent economic restructuring programme. These reform policies saw severe cuts to social spending, affecting particularly health and education. African governments in turn used these funding relationships with the IMF/WB to further limit respect for academic freedom in their universities.
Thus, the IMF/WB intervention was used as a tool to find its way back to influencing the running of African universities, including the new ones built by African governments, and reintroduce the liberal script through its neoliberal economic policies. Apart from the reforms introduced, the WB called for the closure of universities in Africa, claiming that African States were ‘better off closing universities at home and training graduates overseas’.Footnote 74 The approach represented a rehash of the old colonial policy on why and how not to institute higher education in Africa.
Application of the IMF’s neoliberal economic policies has contributed significantly to the state of corporatisation, commercialisation, managerialism and commodification of universities creeping into the university space. In the words of Ochwa-Echel, the imposition of the neoliberal agenda, which treats university education as a ‘commodity’ to be purchased by those who can afford it, has reduced the universities in SSA to serving the needs of the market rather than the public interest.Footnote 75
The policies also saw university education as a mechanism to achieve economic growth as well as a private good for a privileged few. The impact of the application of these measures on academic freedom has been immense. Among others, it has limited the freedom of academics to teach critically and publish freely. It has also sought to reinforce the dominance of Western thinking patterns and thoughts expressed in curricula and which frame and control knowledge production and epistemologies. These developments have also constrained the exercise of academic freedom.Footnote 76 Further, there is limitation on the freedom of scholars to create and maintain new disciplinary fields, especially fields of scholarship that are critical and challenging of prevailing academic orthodoxies.Footnote 77 At the same time, some courses have been described as ‘unproductive’ or ‘unmarketable’ which should give way to employable or relevant courses or programmes.Footnote 78 The implementation of the SAP in many African countries has also contributed to increased pauperisation, which has disabled the poor from accessing quality education. In sum, the systemic deficits inherent in corporatisation of higher education and the corporate identity have contributed to distort the ideal university and its mission.Footnote 79
The severe impact of the SAP implementation on the university in Africa triggered scholars in African universities to come up with the Kampala Declaration on Intellectual Freedom and Social Responsibility in 1990. Paragraph 1 of the Preamble to the document provides that
Intellectual freedom in Africa is currently threatened to an unprecedented degree. The historically produced and persistent economic, political and social crisis of our continent continues to undermine development in all spheres. The imposition of unpopular structural adjustment programmes has been accompanied by increased political repression, widespread poverty and intense human suffering.
One significant reaction of the Kampala Declaration is the introduction of another purpose of the university, that academic freedom should invoke a duty on the academic community to promote rights and democracy in the larger society and thereby improve town-gown relationship.Footnote 80 For example, the Kampala Declaration provides that ‘[t]he struggle for intellectual freedom is an integral part of the struggle of our people for human rights’.Footnote 81 Hagan captures this position; thus, ‘Universities and academics owe it to themselves to minimize their political involvement. But it is hard to expect academics to remain politically neutral when their rights as citizens might well be at stake if they remained aloof from direct and active political involvement’.Footnote 82
Third generation of constitution-making (1989–2000)
The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 resulted in the return to multiparty democracy, the rule of law and human rights in Africa and the re-adoption of liberal democratic constitutions by many African States.
The constitutional liberalisation process was influenced by the doctrine of spreading democracy abroadFootnote 83 as a show of capitalist triumphalism over socialism out of which emerged the ‘instant capitalism, instant democracy’ agenda.Footnote 84 Thus, according to Simmons, Dobbin and Garett, ‘the economic and political liberalisation process was ‘influenced heavily by prior actions of external actors: not just other governments, but international organizations and communities of experts’.Footnote 85 Appiagyei-Atua also argues that ‘the decision by African leaders to design and adopt NEPAD [New Partnership for Africa’s Development] as its framework for economic development … reveals the extent to which Western states continue to dictate, control and overrule attempts by African states to set their own economic agenda’.Footnote 86
The external coercion approach is, thus, largely responsible for the emergence and evolution of academic freedom in contemporary Africa and diffused as part of a global liberal script.Footnote 87 In a large number of these constitutions, references are made to academic or scientific freedom.
Thus, we find 13 (representing 23.6%) of the 55 African countries giving explicit recognition to ‘academic freedom’ in their constitutions. In most of these, ‘academic freedom’ is linked with freedom of expression. For example, article 21(1)(b) of Ghana’s 1992 Constitution provides that ‘[all] persons shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and belief, which shall include academic freedom’. However, in other cases, different segments of freedom of scienceFootnote 88 are jointly recognised, such as the Constitution of Algeria, which provides: ‘Academic freedom and freedom of scientific research shall be guaranteed rights. The State shall work towards promoting and valorising scientific research to further the Nation’s sustainable development’.Footnote 89 One can also mention Zimbabwe’s 2013 Constitution which references ‘academic freedom’ as part of both freedom of expression and freedom of ‘scientific research and creativity’. This group can generally be referred to as following the liberal legal tradition.
Sixteen constitutions (21%) do not explicitly mention ‘academic freedom’ but some other form of freedom of science. These are largely states who adhere to the socialist ideology. For example, article 49(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of Cape Verde stipulates:
Everyone shall have the freedom to learn, educate and teach. 2. Freedom of learning, educating and teaching shall include: (a) The right to attend teaching and educational establishments and to teach without discrimination, as provided by law; (b) The right to choose the type of education and training; (c) The prohibition of the state to programme education and tuition according to any philosophical, aesthetic, political, ideological or religious directives.
Madagascar’s 2010 Constitution only refers to the autonomy of universities. The example of Egypt’s Constitution is unique in the sense that it seems to cover all the key ingredients of academic as well as scientific freedom. Article 21 provides that ‘[t]he state guarantees the independence of universities, scientific and linguistic academies …’ Article 23: The state grants the freedom of scientific research … [to] build a knowledge economy. Article 66: ‘Freedom of scientific research is guaranteed…’ Article 67: ‘Freedom of artistic and literary creation is guaranteed…’ Article 82: ‘The state guarantees … helping the youth to discover their talents and develop their cultural, scientific, psychological, creative and physical abilities’.
Internationalisation
The traditional focus of internationalisation (exchange and co-operation programmes between universities, mainly between the Global South and Global North) has shifted to competition mode for students, scholars, talent for the knowledge economy, funding of complex research and access to the global rankings as well as high impact publications.Footnote 90 This is done at the cost of the large majority of tertiary education institutions and their students and staff in the Global South, especially Africa.Footnote 91 Teferra, therefore, asserts that ‘African higher education is the most internationalised system in the world – not by participation but by omission’ and as a result cannot be intentional but is coerced.Footnote 92
Alemu contributes to the discourse by arguing that the entire internationalisation project creates an environment in which more powerful universities from the Global North play a central role as suppliers of knowledge, whereas weaker institutions and systems from the Global South, with fewer resources and lower academic standards, occupy a peripheral position as consumers. He asserts that African higher education has continued to be peripheral, with relationships being ‘asymmetrical, unethical and unequal’Footnote 93 and occasioning some negatives, including brain drain, the commodification of higher education and the perpetuation of inequality between Global North and Global South universities.Footnote 94
In this context, one may also refer to the application of ‘helicopter research’, where researchers from the Global North conduct field research in the Global South, use local colleagues to provide logistical support and help to do data and sample collection but are not given credit and recognition for their participation in the research. The data and samples are then taken to the Global North for data analysis and publication of the results with no or little involvement of local researchers. Scientific publications resulting from such projects frequently only contribute to the career of the scientists from the rich countries, thus limiting the development of local science capacity and the careers of local scientists. Another demerit of ‘helicopter research’ is that it reduces the quality of research in the target areas and disables local communities from leveraging the research to their own advantage.Footnote 95 These activities by many universities in the Global North and individual academics as well as funding institutions contribute to compromising freedom of enquiry and other forms of academic freedom for African universities, academics, students and communities.
Fourth generation of constitution-making in Africa – (2000 to date)
While Shivji talks about three generations of constitution-making at the time of this write-up, a fourth has set in. Similar to the second generation, which was a reaction to the imposed first generation, the same is the case with the relationship between the third and the fourth generations.
The reaction has been attempts to roll back gains attained in the promotion and consolidation of democracy on the continent.Footnote 96
The stagnation of democracy or the fallback into illiberal democracy in Africa has had its impact on the respect for academic freedom, confirming the relationship between the two as noted above and provoking contestations about the relevance of academic freedom in African higher education institutions. Unlike during the second generation, while it has not led to the amendment of any African constitution to affect academic freedom, some legislation have been passedFootnote 97 or attempted to be passed in some countries. States have also taken a number of measures which have been condemned as violative of academic freedom. Among others, though, de facto, the State has retreated from the university space, it has been using university management as proxies and has found itself indirectly represented in vice chancellors, chairs of university councils and other bodies like tertiary education commissions.Footnote 98
Conclusion and recommendations
The work has sought to address the claim that academic freedom is part of the liberal script by seeking to locate the origins of the university and by extension, academic freedom in Africa, and crediting Europe with coming up with the modern version of the university/academic freedom. However, the study argues that the European contribution to the subject, in the name of the liberal script, was attained through attempts to subject the African pre-modern university to ‘theft of history’, epistemicides and linguicides. Thus, the study supports the view that while one may trace the origins of the university/academic freedom to Africa, academic freedom as it stands today is shaped by the liberal script which hardly references the root of higher education in Africa. As a result of this development, there is a discontinuity and no organic relationship between the universities of old (and its academic freedom) and the modern university in Africa.Footnote 99
The work also establishes that imperialism has contributed to the coloniality of higher education in Africa. The coloniality of higher education, in turn, has contributed to defining the state of academic freedom in Africa today, which differs in some respects from the liberal script.
These include the following. First factor is the perpetuation of mind colonialism and the imposition of the ‘superior knowledge’ of Europe on Africa propagated through curriculum. The impact of this process on academic freedom in Africa has been significant, especially in compromising the use of academic freedom to promote knowledge production, leading to the creation of the ‘captive mind’ – ‘one that is imitative and uncreative and whose thinking is based on Western categories and modes of thought’.Footnote 100
Two is the impact of ‘external over-determination of African intellectual life’ and ‘the global division of intellectual labour that impedes intellectual and theoretical development in Africa and consequently, becomes a relevant factor influencing academic freedom in Africa.Footnote 101
The third factor is the impact on academic freedom in Africa of the continued application of the core principles of the ‘developmental university’ idea by African governments. This has contributed to the suppression of self-determination within the university space and the continued fester of the illiberal script in African universities.Footnote 102 Thus, Beiter rightfully contends that only scientific or academic freedom, rather than state regulation, has the potential to guarantee creativity and innovation in the field of science for the benefit of society at large. Therefore, States should not be entitled to comprehensively regulate the field of science, at the expense of scientific and academic freedom.Footnote 103
Fourth is the extension of the application of the illiberal script through the neoliberal policies of the Bretton Woods institutions, which has contributed to corporatisation, managerialism and commodification of knowledge and has limited higher-education institutions in Africa to fulfil its critical function of the pursuit of truth.
Fifth, the existence of an asymmetrical relationship between academics and students in most African university classrooms, which ‘embeds learners’ oppression’, violates students’ academic freedom and creates a disabling environment for them from acquiring ‘democratic habits’ through the university.Footnote 104 This hindered the ability of the university to realise its second purpose, which is education of students.
Other factors affecting academic freedom in Africa are massification, high lecturer–student ratios, poor remuneration for lecturers and poor allocation of resources for research.
These unique elements, however, are not recognised as such by the African State, which prefer to apply the existing universalist framework though it reflects a Eurocentric paradigm because it equips the State with the power to suppress the capacity of the academic community to speak truth to power and to challenge orthodoxy.
On the other hand, academics and students are recognising these unique factors affecting academic freedom in the African context and opting for the adoption of the composite approach.Footnote 105 This approach seeks to extend the purpose of the university beyond the pursuit for truth to the pursuit of democracy in the larger society. Particularly, it seeks to empower academics and students to build new supportive political constituencies outside the confines of the university to confront both the internal and external actors/factors which hinder the flourishing of academic freedom on the continent.
In the light of the above, the study argues that these historical, cultural, political and other factors have coloured and influenced the environment for research, teaching, learning, dissemination and application of research output and the ability to use knowledge to speak truth to power and challenge orthodoxy. Consequently, they have influenced the type character and features of academic freedom in African universities and the kind of advocacy that can be applied to promote and protect academic freedom as well as expand the frontiers for the application of academic freedom advocacy in Africa.Footnote 106
Consequently, the work proposes the adoption of a relative universalist approach, shaped by the history, the politics and the socio-economic circumstances of many African societies as well as its national and regional particularities and other forms of diversity and relativity. This approach is considered necessary to properly locate the discourse of academic freedom in a manner that will reflect the African reality and make academic freedom more meaningful for application in Africa.
As part of the relative universalist approach is the policy of decolonising the African university which will play a critical role in this liberatory pro-democracy endeavour of academic freedom. Decolonisation of the university means, among other things, ‘structural changes; curriculum change; an epistemological paradigm shift from Eurocentric knowledge to Africa-centred knowledge; and a change of university cultures and systems that are alienating as well as increased and affordable access to education in general’.Footnote 107
Competing interests
None.