Description
Chapter. 1. Introduction
Chapter. 2. Epistemicide’ and Epistemic Emancipation in Africa – Problems and Promises
Chapter. 3. Knowledge production and the Liberation agenda in Africa
Chapter. 4. Decolonisation as self-recovery: the path to intellectual independence
Chapter. 5. Colonial legacy and knowledge production in Africa: Re-echoing the need for epistemic decolonisation
Chapter. 6. A critical exposition of ‘alternative’ site(s) of knowledge production in Africa: Decentering the African university
Chapter. 7. African Epistemic liberation through knowledge democratisation
Chapter. 8. How African Logic can dissipate the Question of Originality and Knowledge Production in Africa
Chapter. 9. Africanising Institutional Culture: What Is Possible and Plausible
Chapter. 10. ‘Africa’s Knowledge and the Quest for Epistemic Liberation in a COVID-19 Crisis
Chapter. 11. Religiosity and African Epistemology
Chapter. 12. Ukama ethic and Covid-19 pandemic: Countervailing social distancing-induced exclusive individualism in (southern) African university
Chapter. 13. African Indigenous Knowledge and the management of COVID-19 pandemic
Chapter. 14. African Knowledge Systems: Shona Paremiology in Promoting Morals, Peace and Human Security
Chapter. 15. A Yòrùbá Worldview on the Compatibility of Human and Nonhuman Animal Relations (HAR) with Environmental Sustainability