Alumni Archives - Institute of African Studies /africanstudies/event-audience/alumni/ 杏吧原创 University Thu, 02 Apr 2026 15:04:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Institute of African Studies Professional Development Symposium /africanstudies/cu-events/institute-of-african-studies-professional-development-symposium/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=institute-of-african-studies-professional-development-symposium Mon, 23 Mar 2026 14:04:19 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20740

Overview

We are bringing together professionals to discuss careers connected to Africa in a world shaped by policy shifts, aid cuts and uncertainties

Are you taking a course in African studies or Interested in Africa-focused careers? Wondering how to navigate a job market being reshaped by global uncertainty, changing development priorities, and AI?

Join us for a timely conversation on opportunity, adaptability, and building a meaningful professional path across sectors such as government, multilateral organisations, nonprofits, media, academia, and tech.

Whether your interests lie in government, nonprofits, media, academia, development, or tech, this event will help you understand where opportunities are emerging and how to position yourself to thrive.

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Public Talk and Poetry Evening with Prof. Nimi Wariboko, Poet and Director, African Studies Center, Boston University /africanstudies/cu-events/public-talk-and-poetry-evening-with-prof-nimi-wariboko-poet-and-director-african-studies-center-boston-university/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=public-talk-and-poetry-evening-with-prof-nimi-wariboko-poet-and-director-african-studies-center-boston-university Fri, 20 Mar 2026 16:05:31 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20725

Register now for In-person participation听

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Umeme Flash Point Series: Roundtable on Africa鈥檚 Future Amid Global Geopolitical Reset /africanstudies/cu-events/umeme-flash-point-series-roundtable-on-africas-future-amid-global-geopolitical-reset/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=umeme-flash-point-series-roundtable-on-africas-future-amid-global-geopolitical-reset Fri, 06 Mar 2026 16:16:36 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20689 The Institute of African Studies (IAS) at 杏吧原创 University invites you to a timely Umeme Flash Point Series roundtable discussion exploring Africa鈥檚 position in an evolving global order.

As geopolitical alliances shift and global trade relationships are renegotiated, African countries face both new risks and emerging opportunities. Will African states remain peripheral in global negotiations, or will they play a stronger role in shaping the future of trade, investment, and international cooperation?

Join leading scholars and policy experts for an engaging discussion on Africa鈥檚 future amid ongoing geopolitical transformation and global trade realignment.

Date: March 18, 2026
Time: 12:30 PM (EST) | 5:30 PM (WAT)
Venue: In-person (2017 Dunton Tower, 杏吧原创 University) and via Zoom

Panelists

Dr. Joseph Atta-Mensah, Senior Fellow, African Centre for Economic Transformation
Dr. Yolande Bouka, Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in Afrofeminist Thought and Political Transformation, Queen鈥檚 University
Dr. Firoze Manji, Founder, Daraja Press and Adjunct Professor, 杏吧原创 University

Moderator

Professor Nduka Otiono, Director, Institute of African Studies, 杏吧原创 University

For In-person participation, please r.
For online participation, please

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The Man They Called 鈥淭he Mad Mullah鈥 Film Screening /africanstudies/cu-events/the-man-they-called-the-mad-mullah-film-screening/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-man-they-called-the-mad-mullah-film-screening Thu, 26 Feb 2026 19:35:07 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20680 The Institute of African Studies Graduate Students invite you to join us for a film screening of The Man They Called 鈥淭he Mad Mullah鈥听on March 4 at 4:00 PM听in the Pius Adesanmi Resource Room (Dunton Tower 1706).

The film explores the life and legacy of Sayyid Mohammed Abdullah Hassan – often labeled 鈥The Mad Mullah鈥 by the British – who was a pivotal leader in Somali resistance against colonial rule. He challenged European colonial authority and mobilized emerging national consciousness. The film revisits his contested legacy, examining how colonial narratives shaped his image and how he remains a symbol of听Somali nationalism in the Horn of Africa.

Following the screening, we will hold an informal discussion reflecting on the histories of resistance, colonial narratives, and the politics of representation in the Horn of Africa. Beyond the film itself, we hope to foster thoughtful discussion, intellectual exchange, and community across disciplines.

Popcorn will be provided

Click the link below to RSVP:

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Ubuntu translanguaging: Valuing local languages in community-engaged digital storytelling with isiXhosa-speaking Cape Flats residents to address environmental disaster risks /africanstudies/cu-events/ubuntu-translanguaging/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ubuntu-translanguaging Mon, 09 Feb 2026 14:59:07 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20657 As part of the AIKRN Quarterly Webinar Series, the Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network (AIKRN) and the Institute of African Studies at 杏吧原创 University, Invite you to join us for: “Ubuntu translanguaging: Valuing local languages in community-engaged digital storytelling with isiXhosa-speaking Cape Flats residents to address environmental disaster risks“.

Speaker: Prof. Tsitsi Mpofu-Mketwa,School of Social work, 杏吧原创 University.

Date: March 30, 2026
Time: 10:00 AM 鈥 12:00 PM (EST) or 3:00 PM 鈥 5:00 PM GMT

Abstract:

This presentation draws on nine isiXhosa digital stories produced as part of an interdisciplinary research project that employed household surveys, participatory methods including community mapping, photovoice and digital storytelling. The project sought to co-produce knowledge and address community resilience against flooding, drought and fire disasters in three Cape Flats vulnerable communities. The co-researchers elucidated their experiences of disasters and their听understanding of resilience through digital storytelling. They emphasised ubuntu values of humanism and interdependency in framing their sense of resilience. Here we unpack why we recommend translanguaging- expanding boundaries of language use from the conventions of English to incorporate other meaning-making modes, including narrative scripts, creative art and linguistic tools to generate richer knowledge. By validating isiXhosa and other cultural identities, co-creating the concept of resilience and narrative analysis of isiXhosa scripts, we demonstrated that translanguaging is pivotal to decoloniality and enhances knowledge co-production in the context of environmental disaster risks.

杏吧原创 the speaker

Dr Tsitsi Mpofu-Mketwa joined 杏吧原创 University in 2023, bringing in more than 15 years of experience in the academic and non-profit sectors. Tsitsi worked in the field of poverty and social development in the Cape Flats communities of Cape Town, with a specific focus on child protection social work, youth development, and women鈥檚 empowerment. Dr Mpofu-Mketwa鈥檚 research interests are in applied community-engaged and participatory research that draws on human development paradigms to build capacities of marginalized and most deprived communities in response to urban poverty and social exclusion. 听Dr Mpofu-Mketwa鈥檚 research aims to promote sustainable livelihoods in poverty contexts and understand how resilience, individual and collective agency contribute to social and human development. Dr Mpofu-Mketwa has taught sociology and social work courses on poverty, development, and community development at undergraduate and graduate levels. Dr Mpofu-Mketwa is actively involved in environmental advocacy by tackling invasive species to promote green spaces as part of green social work through the Greenspace Stewardship Committee of Alta Vista Community Association in Ottawa. Dr Mpofu-Mketwa holds a PhD degree in Sociology of Development and an MSoc Sci in Social Development from the University of Cape Town. She is currently the Director of the Centre for Studies on Poverty and Social Citizenship.

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Democracy as Disempowerment: Insurgent Publics and the Political Economy of Post-1999 Nigeria /africanstudies/cu-events/democracy-as-disempowerment-insurgent-publics-and-the-political-economy-of-post-1999-nigeria/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=democracy-as-disempowerment-insurgent-publics-and-the-political-economy-of-post-1999-nigeria Mon, 26 Jan 2026 14:58:15 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20632

Join us for the Brownbag Seminar entitled ”听Democracy as Disempowerment: Insurgent Publics and the Political Economy of Post-1999 Nigeria” by听Professor Adelaja Odutola Odukoya听,听 Department of Political Science听University of Lagos, 听Nigeria

Abstract

The return of Nigeria from military authoritarianism to political democracy鈥攄istinct from economic democracy鈥攐n 29 May 1999 was greeted with widespread national and international support. This support was anchored on the assumption that democracy necessarily translates into good governance, improved material conditions, and the empowerment of the citizenry. Over more than two decades of uninterrupted civil rule, this philosophical assumption has hardened into a dangerous delusion. The existential conditions of Nigerians are today worse than they were in 1999, while the country has continued to regress deeper into an illiberal democratic order. This paper argues that this outcome is not accidental but is rooted in the unresolved tension between the political and economic foundations of democracy in Nigeria. While formal political rights and electoral competition have expanded, neoliberal restructuring鈥攅ntrenched through the convergence of domestic political elites and transnational capital鈥攈as produced economic authoritarianism, mass dispossession, and systematic disempowerment. Democracy, in this context, has functioned less as an instrument of popular empowerment than as a legitimating framework for elite accumulation and state capture. Given Nigeria鈥檚 long history of resilience and resistance, the paper notes that Nigerians have not been passive in the face of democracy鈥檚 unrealised expectations. However, unlike the organised civil society and labour movements that were at the forefront of the struggles against military rule in the 1980s and 1990s, the contradictions generated by the post-1999 democratic order have produced what this paper conceptualises as insurgent publics. These insurgent publics, despite their deep misgivings about democracy and their desire for transformative change, are characterised by weak organisation, multiple and dispersed centres of action, incoherent or absent ideological orientation, and largely episodic interventions. Against this background, the paper contends that the struggle for popular empowerment in Nigeria has, in a fundamental sense, yet to begin. The insurgent publics remain too weak to constitute an effective counter-force against a predatory domestic political elite that has successfully deployed the mantra of democracy for state capture, and in alliance with transnational capital have institutionalised neoliberalism as a mechanism of economic authoritarianism and disempowerment. The paper also notes that the ideological puritanism and sectarianism of the Nigerian Left have further undermined this struggle. Suggestions are advanced towards a viable pathway for popular empowerment in Nigeria.

Keywords: EndBadGovernance; EndSARS; protest; social media; repression; civic resilience.

杏吧原创 the Speaker:

Professor Adelaja Odutola Odukoya, fspsp.

Adelaja Odutola Odukoya, PhD.; a scholar-activist, is a Professor of Comparative Political Economy at the Department of Political Science, University of Lagos, Nigeria. He is the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University and also doubles as the Chairman of the Joint Board of Postgraduate Studies at the Administrative Staff College, Topo, Badagry, Lagos, Nigeria. A fellow of the Society for Peace Studies and Practice (FSPSP), his research interest is oriented towards the intersection between the state, class power and accumulation as a basis of understanding the crisis and contradictions of peripheral capitalist development in Africa. He also works on concerns dealing with indigenous knowledge, development, democratization and governance crises in Africa among other areas. He is widely published with over fifty publications within and outside Nigeria in influential outlets.

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A Priori Understandings of Presidential Term Limits: Beyond Dogma, Experimenting With Term Limits in Africa /africanstudies/cu-events/a-priori-understandings-of-presidential-term-limits/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-priori-understandings-of-presidential-term-limits Mon, 26 Jan 2026 14:47:04 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20631

Join us for the Brownbag Seminar entitled “A Priori Understandings of Presidential Term Limits: Beyond Dogma, Experimenting With Term Limits in Africa” by听Dr. Kagiso 鈥淭K鈥 Pooe,听听Asst. Professor of Future Governance (Scenarios), The African School of Governance (Kigali).

Abstract

In 2012, Time magazine proclaimed that the world was entering an 鈥楢frica Rising鈥 moment, suggesting the continent鈥檚 one billion citizens might finally shake off the legacies of colonial and post-liberation struggles. However, twelve years on, the African Development Bank Group鈥檚 2024 report laments that Africa鈥檚 Gross Domestic Product growth has dropped to 3.1 percent from 4.1 percent in 2023. Meanwhile, the International Labour Organization reports that 72 million African youths are not in education, employment, or training. Two of Africa鈥檚 leading economies, South Africa and Nigeria, continue to suffer from systemic governance failures, as detailed in reports such as South Africa鈥檚 Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture and Nigeria鈥檚 investigations into the impact of governance policy on socioeconomic development.
These persistent challenges and, in some instances, the outright failure of governments and political actors to address public policy issues are now spurring experimentation with alternative governance models. In some cases, former liberation movements like the African National Congress, having lost outright political power, are turning to coalition governments. Meanwhile, states such as Burkina Faso, Egypt, and Zimbabwe have employed non-democratic means to usher in new or previously marginalised political elites.
This article contends that these non-traditional attempts to address complex policy failures have given rise to a nuanced site of academic and political struggle: presidential term limits. It argues that the success of states like Singapore and China, where head-of-state term limits have been flexible or absent, rightly challenges an uncritically accepted constitutional orthodoxy. While the traditional insistence on fixed term limits is constitutionally familiar, its necessity has never been scientifically proven. By examining ten African states, this article will assert that, given
the nature and complexity of contemporary public policy problems, experimentation with term-limit models should be encouraged.
杏吧原创 the Speaker:

Dr. TK Pooe is an assistant professor at ASG, where he teaches Anticipatory governance, management and delivery. He is a scholar and policy expert with an adjunct role at the University of the Witwatersrand School of Governance in South Africa. He teaches and supervises in areas such as reforming state-owned entities (SOEs), institutional strengthening, development planning, and scenario-based governance. With a public policy career spanning academia and government, TK has held teaching and leadership roles at North-West University and the University of KwaZulu-Natal. Before academia, he worked in development planning and oversight at the Gauteng Provincial Legislature and Sedibeng District Municipality. He has consulted widely, including for the Gordon Institute of Business Science and the Thabo Mbeki African School of Public and International Affairs, focusing on illicit financial flows in mining. As of 2022, he leads the WSG SoE鈥揈nergy Transition Consortium, providing strategic guidance on climate policy, carbon markets, and institutional post-carbon readiness.

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Bullets, Batons and Silence: Analyzing the A State Response to the 2024 End Bad Governance Protests in Nigeria /africanstudies/cu-events/bullets-batons-and-silence-analyzing-the-a-state-response-to-the-2024-end-bad-governance-protests-in-nigeria/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=bullets-batons-and-silence-analyzing-the-a-state-response-to-the-2024-end-bad-governance-protests-in-nigeria Mon, 26 Jan 2026 14:29:48 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20626

Join us for the Brownbag Seminar entitled “Bullets, Batons and Silence: Analyzing The State Response to the 2024 End Bad Governance Protests in Nigeria” by听Dr.Damilola Taiye Agbalajobi,听Professor of Political Science,听Department of Political Science,听Obafemi Awolowo University.

Abstract

This study analyses the Nigerian government鈥檚 response to the 2024 #EndBadGovernance protests, a youth-led movement triggered by worsening economic conditions, fuel subsidy removal, and systemic governance failures. Using political opportunity theory, it examines how structural features of Nigeria鈥檚 political landscape shaped both the protests鈥 emergence and state reactions. Primary data were sourced from semi-structured interviews with participants, triangulated with human鈥憆ights reports, official statements, and digital media archives. Reflexive thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke) identified five themes: structural neglect; social media as a double-edged tool; expanding tactics of state repression; disinformation as a delegitimising strategy; and civic renewal amid fear and fragmentation. Findings show mobilization was rooted in long-standing socio-economic marginalization and catalysed by shared deprivation. The movement鈥檚 multilingual outreach鈥擡nglish, Pidgin, Hausa, Yoruba, and Igbo鈥攂roadened resonance across regions. While digital platforms enabled coordination and visibility, they also exposed activists to surveillance and targeted repression. The state deployed a mix of physical force, intimidation, online censorship, and narrative manipulation to suppress dissent. Despite repression, the protests revitalised civic consciousness and demonstrated youth resilience. The study concludes by situating these dynamics within global patterns of protest repression and calls for stronger protections for civil liberties in fragile democracies like Nigeria.

Keywords: EndBadGovernance; EndSARS; protest; social media; repression; civic resilience.

杏吧原创 the Speaker:

Damilola Taiye Agbalajobi is a political scientist and gender specialist whose research spans gender and governance, women in politics and peacebuilding, gender and corruption, gendered impacts of climate change, gender-based violence, and the role of violence in elections. Her work has appeared in peer-reviewed journals, including World Development, and in edited volumes on women, power, and development.
Since 2008 she has received multiple travel grants to present at international conferences and has secured competitive research funding, notably serving as principal investigator on an NRF/TETFund project on the political inclusion of persons with disabilities in Nigeria. She currently serves as Political Settlement Researcher with the African Cities Research Consortium (Lagos team), and she just completed a fellowship as a Senior Research Fellow at the Global Forum on Democracy and Development 鈥 Bogota Hub.
Damilola holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Lagos and is a faculty member in the Department of Political Science at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile鈥慖fe, Nigeria. Her teaching and mentorship complement a sustained record of policy-relevant research and engagement across academic, civic, and international development spaces.

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Gender-Based Strategies and use of indigenous systems in Dairy Farming Households in Western Uganda /africanstudies/cu-events/gender-based-strategies-and-use-of-indigenous-systems-in-dairy-farming-households-in-western-uganda/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=gender-based-strategies-and-use-of-indigenous-systems-in-dairy-farming-households-in-western-uganda Mon, 26 Jan 2026 14:18:46 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20616

Join us for the Brownbag Seminar entitled “Gender-Based Strategies and use of indigenous systems in Dairy Farming Households in Western Uganda” by听Dr. , Senior Lecturer at Kyambogo University.

Abstract:

Gender-based strategies and the use of indigenous systems play a critical role in shaping dairy farming households in Western Uganda, where livestock production is deeply embedded in socio-cultural norms and traditional knowledge systems. Within these households, gendered divisions of labor strongly influence access to productive resources, decision-making power, and control over dairy outputs, with men often dominating ownership of cattle and milk sales, while women are primarily responsible for daily animal care, milk handling, processing, and household nutrition. Indigenous dairy management practices such as traditional herd management, milk preservation, sanitation methods, and value-addition techniques including the production of ghee and fermented products are largely maintained and transmitted by women, reflecting their central role in sustaining household food security and livestock health. However, despite their extensive knowledge and labor contributions, women鈥檚 participation in formal dairy markets and extension services remains constrained by patriarchal norms, limited access to credit, technologies, and training opportunities. Gender-responsive strategies that recognize and strengthen indigenous knowledge systems, promote equitable access to resources, and enhance women鈥檚 decision-making capacity are therefore essential for improving productivity, milk safety, and income generation. Integrating indigenous practices with modern dairy innovations through inclusive policies and targeted interventions can foster sustainable dairy value chains, enhance resilience among smallholder households, and contribute to broader goals of gender equity and rural development in Western Uganda.

杏吧原创 the Speaker:

Dr. Judith I 听听Nagasha, Head of International Relations and a Lecture at Kyambogo University. Dr Nagasha holds a PhD in Gender and Climate change; a Master鈥檚 of Development Management and Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences. In the international relation office, she provides strategic leadership in advancing the university鈥檚 internationalization agenda by developing global partnerships, promoting research and grants collaboration, and fostering staff and student mobility. Acting as the university鈥檚 global representative, the Head strengthens networks with universities, embassies, and development partners to enhance international visibility and reputation. She teaches in the Department of Development Studies, Dr. Nagasha has been instrumental in integrating research, policy, and practice. She leads the Translating Science into听Policy and Practice Project under the Sida-funded Afrifose2030 Programme at Kyambogo University. Through this initiative, she has empowered young researchers across eight African countries, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Kenya, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Uganda to develop evidence-based policies. As principal collaborator, Dr. Nagasha has led gender- responsive projects such as empowering women鈥檚 entrepreneurship among the Batwa Indigenous Community of Uganda, promoting gender-inclusive climate change approaches in livestock farming to improve milk safety and marketing, advancing women鈥檚 empowerment in coffee-banana systems in Eastern Uganda, and documenting women鈥檚 roles in fisheries value chains along Lake Victoria. She is currently researching climate-induced migration and gender- based livelihood adaptation in refugee host communities in Refugee Settlements in Uganda, while also promoting vocational training to reduce youth unemployment and improve mental health. Dr. Nagasha has published journal articles, authored policy briefs, and presented her research at international conferences and community forums.

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Indigenous Health and Well being: Opportunities for Jobs and Entrepreneurship for African Youth /africanstudies/cu-events/indigenous-health-and-well-being/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=indigenous-health-and-well-being Fri, 07 Nov 2025 16:19:16 +0000 /africanstudies/?post_type=cu-events&p=20584 The Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network (AIKRN) and the Institute of African Studies (IAS) at 杏吧原创 University invite you to join the upcoming AIKRN Quarterly Webinar on Indigenous Health听 and Wellbeing: Opportunities for Jobs and Entrepreneurship for African Youth.鈥

Across Africa, Indigenous health systems rooted in traditional medicine, natural healing practices, community care, and spirituality have sustained generations. Today, these systems continue to offer affordable, culturally grounded, and sustainable healthcare solutions鈥攅specially in rural areas.

Yet, much of this Indigenous knowledge remains undervalued, under-documented, and disconnected from contemporary entrepreneurship and innovation ecosystems. With youth unemployment hovering around 12% across the continent, the time is ripe to bridge ancestral wisdom with youth-led innovation and enterprise to build resilient, inclusive, and sustainable economies.

This engaging two-hour webinar will convene scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and young entrepreneurs to explore how Indigenous health knowledge can serve as a powerful foundation for innovation, job creation, and sustainable development in Africa.

Objectives

  • To explore the linkages between Indigenous health knowledge and youth entrepreneurship in Africa.
  • To identify opportunities for innovation, enterprise, and value addition within Indigenous health systems.
  • To highlight best practices, successful models, and networks supporting Indigenous health enterprises.
  • To encourage partnerships between academia, policymakers, youth innovators, and Indigenous knowledge holders.

Expected Outcomes

  • Increased awareness of Indigenous health entrepreneurship opportunities for African youth
  • Strengthened partnerships between 杏吧原创 University, African institutions, and Indigenous communities
  • Identification of policy and research priorities for Indigenous health innovation
  • Creation of a youth-focused network under AIKRN to support Indigenous entrepreneurship
  • Documentation of proceedings as a policy brief or report for broader dissemination

Panelists

Dr. Betty Akwongo
Lecturer, Department of Biology, Muni University (Uganda)
PhD in Plant Science (Ethnobotany), Makerere University
Research focus: Ethnobotany, antimicrobial plant studies, pharmacognosy, biodiversity conservation, and natural product drug development.

Mr. Mpilo Shange
Lecturer, Department of Nursing, University of Zululand (South Africa)
Research focus: Midwifery nursing science, primary health care, community health, and traditional medicine in maternal health.

Dr. Adebowale Ayobade
Associate Professor, Department of Social Work, University of Lagos (Nigeria)
Research focus: Social entrepreneurship, gender and enterprise studies, informal business systems, and indigenous economic resilience.

Mr. Ojiko Folorunsho Raphael
Traditional Bone Setter, Lagos State (Nigeria)
An Indigenous entrepreneur preserving ancestral healing practices鈥攐ffering bone setting, massage, arthritis, and joint care services.

Moderator:听

Dr O. Damola Adejumo-Ayibiowu
Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow, UNISA
Member, Africa Indigenous Knowledge Research Network (AIKRN)

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