The Elite Africa Project is a global network of scholars working to shift how Africa and its elites are understood.

Search the Database

The Elite Africa Project

is a Canadian-based global network of scholars working to challenge predominant understandings of Africa and its elites.

Both in academia and in wider public discourse, African elites have either been ignored or depicted as grasping and self-interested. This framing perpetuates negative depictions of the continent and its peoples and draws on a simplistic understanding of what power is and how it is wielded. Our work aims to counter these perceptions by initiating global conversations about “who leads” in Africa and how they do so.

We seek to disrupt and renew both academic and public discussions of African leadership, refocusing attention on a wider, qualitatively different set of elites from those that have predominated in the past (such as the parasitic “Big Men” of neo-patrimonial politics).

Burna Boy, Nigerian musician, rapper and songwriter; in 2021, his album Twice as Tall won the Best World Music Album at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards, and he enjoyed back to back Grammy award nominations in 2019 and 2020.

This project focuses on Africa’s elites, defined as those who operate at the highest level across a range of domains, wield significant power, and possess expert knowledge, skills, and personal strengths that are deployed in strategic, creative, and generative ways. While elites are those who possess the most consequential and powerful agenda-setting and decision-making capacity, Africa’s elites have either been sidelined in many of our analyses or rendered monotonal. When we switch frames to consider the continent as embodying and projecting new, generative forms of power, it changes our view of Africa. It may also change how we understand power itself.

We look at six domains of elite power, from the political to the aesthetic, and ask how we might shift how we think about and study Africa, and how this shift would impact our conceptualization of power and its exercise. Our goal is to contribute to popular conversations about Africa and to highlight the achievements of the astonishing new generation of leaders for a broader public audience.

This website will serve as a hub for collaborative activity by scholars, activists, and practitioners working on Elite Africa and house a searchable database of primary and secondary materials on African elites.

Kofi Annan (1938-2018), Ghanaian-born diplomat, trained in economics, international relations and management; was the first UNSG to be elected from within the ranks of the UN staff itself and served in various key roles before becoming Secretary General.

The Elite Africa Project

is a Canadian-based global network of scholars working to challenge predominant understandings of Africa and its elites.

Both in academia and in wider public discourse, African elites have either been ignored or depicted as grasping and self-interested. This framing perpetuates negative depictions of the continent and its peoples and draws on a simplistic understanding of what power is and how it is wielded. Our work aims to counter these perceptions by initiating global conversations about “who leads” in Africa and how they do so.

We seek to disrupt and renew both academic and public discussions of African leadership, refocusing attention on a wider, qualitatively different set of elites from those that have predominated in the past (such as the parasitic “Big Men” of neo-patrimonial politics).

This project focuses on Africa’s elites — those who operate at the highest level across a range of domains, wield significant power, and possess expert knowledge, skills, and personal strengths that are deployed in strategic, creative, and generative ways. When we switch frames to consider the continent as embodying and projecting new, generative forms of power, it changes our view of Africa. It may also change how we understand power itself.

This website is the hub for collaborative activity by scholars, activists, and practitioners working on Elite Africa and will house a searchable database of primary and secondary materials on African elites.

ELITE AFRICA PROJECT DATABASE

Domains of Power

Clear

Entry Format

Clear

Country of Interest

Clear

Date

Clear
From
To

Tags

Clear
Showing 0 results
of 0 items.
highlight
Reset All
Advanced Search
Filtering by:
Tag
close icon

Black Camera

Academic journal

Bloomington, IN, USA

blackcam.sitehost.iu.edu

Description:

An international scholarly film journal, Black Camera constitutes a  new platform for the study and documentation of the black cinematic experience in the world.

Black Camera

This is some text inside of a div block.

Black Camera, Bloomington, IN, USA

Aesthetic

Awotele, la revue ciné panadricaine

Magazine

Pantin, France

awotele.com

Description:

Launched in 2015, AWOTELE is a PanAfrican Film Critic Magazine,  bilingual FR/EN, published by Sudu Connexion on the occasion of the three  major cinematographic events on the continent: Carthage (Tunisia),  Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso) and Durban (South Africa).

Awotele, la revue ciné panadricaine

This is some text inside of a div block.

Awotele, la revue ciné panadricaine, Pantin, France

Aesthetic

Alliance Panafricaine des Scénaristes et Réalisateurs (APASER)

Organization

Algiers, Algeria

https://www.apaser.org/

Description:

APASER  is the Alliance Panafricaine des Scénaristes et Réalisateurs. This international collaboration between Writers & Directors  Worldwide, CISAC and the Pan-African Federation of Filmmakers exists to  protect and promote the rights of audiovisual creators in Africa.

Alliance Panafricaine des Scénaristes et Réalisateurs (APASER)

This is some text inside of a div block.

Alliance Panafricaine des Scénaristes et Réalisateurs (APASER), Algiers, Algeria

Aesthetic

Afrikamera

Festival

Berlin, Germany

afrikamera.de/en

Description:

The non-profit cultural association, toucouler e.V., has since 2007 engaged in the intercultural dialogue between Africa and Germany. With the  “AFRIKAMERA – current cinema from Africa” film festival, toucouleur e.V.  seeks to counter the lack of awareness towards contemporary African film  production in the German capital.

Afrikamera

This is some text inside of a div block.

Afrikamera, Berlin, Germany

Aesthetic

Africiné

Magazine

Dakar, Senegal

https://www.africine.org/

africine@yahoo.fr

Description:

Africiné is the online Magazine edited by the African Federation of  Film Critics (AFFC /FACC, based in Dakar, Senegal) and the World Leader  Website only dedicated to African & Diaspora Films.

Africiné

This is some text inside of a div block.

Africiné, Dakar, Senegal

Aesthetic

African Screen Worlds: Decolonising Film and Screen Studies

Research project

London, UK

screenworlds.org

Description:

African Screen Worlds: Decolonising Film and Screen Studies’ is a  five-year, European Research Council-funded research project led by Professor Lindiwe Dovey and hosted at SOAS University of London (from 2019 to 2024). Through producing research films, video essays, edited books, articles, and toolkits, and through curating workshops, conversations, film screenings and panel discussions, the project explores in particular Africans’ contributions to the diverse, complex screen worlds that make up audiovisual cultures in our contemporary moment. It is also interested in putting African cinemas into conversation with other regional cinemas so that we can theorise global screen worlds in more inclusive, nuanced, decolonised ways.

African Screen Worlds: Decolonising Film and Screen Studies

This is some text inside of a div block.

African Screen Worlds: Decolonising Film and Screen Studies, London, UK

Aesthetic
No results found.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Our distinctive typeface, Format-1452, was designed by Frank Adebiaye, a French-Beninese type designer and founder of the experimental Velvetyne Type Foundry.