Recently published journal articles - week 07 2022

Retrieved week 07 2022

Archive

Africa
BEHURIA, P. 2022. The curious case of domestic capitalists in Africa: towards a political economy of diversified business groups. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):1-17.
Keywords: Africa ; business ; capitalists ; diversified business groups ; State-business relations
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1899144

Africa
WORKNEH, T. W. 2022. Pandemic politics and Africa: Examining discourses of Afrophobia in the news media. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):159-176.
Keywords: Africa ; Afrophobia ; China ; coronavirus ; COVID-19 ; geopolitics ; postcolonial theory

Algeria
JONES, C. 2022. Kourat el Kadem: soccer culture and fandom in postcolonial Francophone Algerian texts. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):143-159.
Keywords: Algeria ; postcolonial ; soccer fandom ; sports ; terrorism
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1789459

Algeria
SARIAHMED BELHADJ, N. 2022. The December 1960 demonstrations in Algiers: spontaneity and organisation of mass action. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):104-142.
Keywords: Algerian Revolution ; December 1960 ; National Liberation Front (FLN) ; oral history ; popular demonstrations
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1805735

Botswana
MANATSHA, B. T. & MORAPEDI, W. G. 2022. Reflections on a quota system for tribal land allocation in peri-urban areas in Botswana. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):63-77.
Keywords: constitution ; Land quota ; peri-urban villages ; social justice ; Tribal Land Act ; Vision 2016
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1928020

Egypt
KEBSI, J. 2022. ‘Gendering illiterature: the representation of the Egyptian women left behind in Ayman Zohry’s “The Mediterranean Sea”’. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):180-200.
Keywords: Egypt ; Gendered illiterature ; globalisation ; paperless migration ; women left behind
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1793133 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13629387.2020.1793133

Ghana
ANOFF-NTOW, K. A. & TETTEY, W. J. 2022. COVID-19 narratives and counter-narratives in Ghana: The dialectics of state messaging and alternative re/de-constructions. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):125-142.
Keywords: contrarian voices ; COVID-19 ; framing ; infodermic ; pandemic ; politicizing science

Kenya
NYANOTI, J. N. 2022. Analysing the mythologies and the ideological nuances in photographic representation of COVID-19 containment in Kenya’s newspapers. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):109-123.
Keywords: COVID-19 ; ideology ; mythologies ; mythology ; newspapers ; pandemic ; photography ; representation

Libya
BECCARO, A. 2022. ISIS in Libya and beyond, 2014–2016. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):160-179.
Keywords: hybrid warfare ; Islamic state ; Libya ; North Africa ; terrorism
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1747445

Morocco
EL HOUR, R. 2022. Moroccan female saints in written and oral traditions: Lallā Mennāna, patron saint of Larache. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):62-79.
Keywords: female saints ; Lalla Mennāna ; Larache ; Morocco ; written and oral tradition
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1771309

Morocco
SLITINE EL MGHARI, N. 2022. The Moroccan city: a quest for cultural memory in Francophone and Arabophone contemporary literature. The Journal of North African Studies, 27 (1):40-61.
Keywords: Individual and collective memory ; lieux de mémoire ; mellah ; medina gates ; Moroccanness ; poetics of the Moroccan city
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2020.1806827

Nigeria
ADEBOMI, O. O. 2022. Language in a pandemic: A multimodal analysis of social media representation of COVID-19. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):7-28.
Keywords: COVID-19 ; linguistic representation ; multimodal analysis ; pandemic ; social media

Nigeria
AYO-OBIREMI, I. T. 2022. The influence of photographs, music and comedy in Instagram coronavirus messages on adult preventive habits. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):95-108.
Keywords: comedy ; coronavirus ; Instagram messages ; music ; photographs ; prevention habits ; social media infuencers

Nigeria
ERNEST-SAMUEL, G. C. & UDUMA, N. E. 2022. Nigerian government and management of news and information on the coronavirus pandemic. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):143-158.
Keywords: censorship ; COVID-19 ; government ; information ; media ; news ; OGP

Nigeria
EZE, O. J., AJAH, B. O., NWONOVO, O. S. & ATAMA, C. S. 2022. Health sector corruption and COVID-19 outbreak: evidence from Anambra and Enugu States, Nigeria. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):34-46.
Keywords: Anti-corruption laws ; brain-drain ; corruption ; COVID-19 ; healthcare system
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1921129

Nigeria
OJEBUYI, B. R., MOBOLAJI, A. O. & KOLAWOLE, R. A. 2022. Active news audience in COVID-19 pandemic season: Online news sharing motives and secondary gatekeeping decisions by social media users in Nigeria. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):45-61.
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic ; news sharing ; newsworthiness criteria ; Nigerian social media users ; online news consumers ; secondary gatekeeping

Senegal
SENDRA, E. & KEYTI 2022. Use of Senegalese music to raise coronavirus awareness on social media. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):81-94.
Keywords: awareness campaign ; coronavirus ; edutainment ; music ; Senegal ; social media

South Africa
BOSWELL, R. & PILLAY, R. 2022. Changing heritage, changing the world? The case of a South African University. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):113-131.
Keywords: Change ; Covid-19 ; critical heritage ; universities
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1945550

South Africa
MAHALI, A. & MATETE, N. 2022. #MbokodoLeadUs: the gendered politics of black womxn leading campus-based activism in South Africa’s recent university student movements. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):132-146.
Keywords: #FeesMustFall ; black women ; feminism ; social movements ; student protest
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1946490

South Africa
SKOSANA, D. 2022. Grave matters: dispossession and the desecration of ancestral graves by mining corporations in South Africa. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):47-62.
Keywords: Dispossession ; grave relocations ; household relocations ; intangible loss ; material reductionism
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1926937

Southern Africa
MARE, A. & MUNORIYARWA, A. 2022. Guardians of truth? Fact-checking the ‘disinfodemic’ in Southern Africa during the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):63-79.
Keywords: ‘ ; Africa Check ; COVID-19 ; disinfodemic’ ; disinformation ; fact-checking organizations ; misinformation ; Namibia Fact Check ; ZimFact

Subsaharan Africa
BECKER, B. 2022. The colonial struggle over polygamy: Consequences for educational expansion in sub-Saharan Africa. Economic History of Developing Regions, 37 (1):27-49.
Keywords: Africa and polygamy ; Colonialism ; education ; missionaries
https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2021.1940946 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/20780389.2021.1940946

Subsaharan Africa
DONELLI, F. 2022. Turkey’s involvement in Sub-Saharan Africa: an empirical analysis of multitrack approach. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):18-33.
Keywords: development ; multitrack diplomacy ; non-state actors ; Sub-Saharan Africa ; Turkey
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1900551

Subsaharan Africa
MWAURA, J. & AKPOJIVI, U. 2022. Imagine dying from an overseas disease, when you do not even own a passport: A critical analysis of Twitter conversations in the wake of COVID-19 in Kenya and South Africa. Journal of African Media Studies, 14 (1):29-44.
Keywords: COVID-19 ; discourse ; Kenya ; postcolonialism ; social media ; South Africa

Zimbabwe
MANGEYA, H. & TAGWIREI, C. 2022. WhatsApp coup jokes and the dialogue on Zimbabwean politics. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):97-112.
Keywords: humour ; jokes ; politics ; social media ; Zimbabwean coup
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1933398

Zimbabwe
SHONHE, T., SCOONES, I. & MURIMBARIMBA, F. 2022. Agricultural commercialisation and changing labour regimes in Zimbabwe. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 40 (1):78-96.
Keywords: agrarian transition ; agricultural commercialisation ; changing labour regimes ; Land reform
https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2021.1933397 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/02589001.2021.1933397