The Center coordinates and develops the interdisciplinary interests
of Africanists across the University of Kansas, and promotes the understanding
and study of Africa in the university, the state, and the region. Its mission
includes the enhancement of curriculum, the sponsorship of research, the organization
of conferences, the promotion of special projects, the acquisition of library
and related sources, the conduct of outreach programs, the
seeking and acquistion of grants and special funding to make these activities
possible and to assist the university in their realization.
The Center Director is appointed by the College. The Executive
Committee consists of the Director and Associate Director, the African Language
Coordinator, one member of the Department of African & African-American
Studies, five at-large representatives and a student representative from the humanities, social sciences,
professional schools and natural sciences, and the University Libraries, all
elected by the Council annually; Ex officio members of the Executive Committee
include the Chair of the Department of African & African-American Studies,
the Center's Program Assistant, the Dean of International Programs or a representative,
the Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences for Area Studies
Departments and Programs. The Executive Committee meets monthly and functions
as the major policy-formulating body for the Center.
(From the Bylaws,
adopted by the University of Kansas African Studies Council, April 24, 1998. Revised April, 2007)
Background of the Center
The Center originated from initiatives in the Department of African &
African American Studies in the 1980's, and crystallized in the 1990's with
Title VI grants in Foreign Languages and Area Studies. Since then the Center
has been a designated National Resource Center in African Studies with Title
VI funding during two three year cycles (1994-1997, 2000-2003) and the current four-year cycle (2006-2010). KASC also awards Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowships, with U.S. Department of Education funding for graduate student language training in Arabic, KiSwahili, Hausa, and Wolof. KU's Africanists
have received numerous other research and grant programs from the U.S. Department
of Education {KU's Business School twice has been designated as a Center for
International Business (CIBER)} and the Department of State (Grants for University
Affiliation Programs with Gaston Berger University in Saint Louis, Senegal and
the University of Zambia in Lusaka). KU's African Studies Faculty have received
many Fulbright Fellowships to Africa.