2018
DOI: 10.3390/genealogy2030028
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Pan-Africanism: A Quest for Liberation and the Pursuit of a United Africa

Abstract: Our paper examines the place of Pan-Africanism as an educational, political, and cultural movement which had a lasting impact on the on the relationship between liberation and people of African descent, in the continent of Africa and the Diaspora. We also show its evolution, beginning with formerly enslaved Africans in the Americas, to the colonial borders of the 1884 Berlin Conference, and conclude with the independence movements in Africa. For formerly enslaved Africans, Pan-Africanism was an idea that helpe… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…These efforts were all in an attempt to get governments of those countries, notably the United States of America which has suffered colonialism itself, to pressurise or rather persuade the colonial masters to grant independence to African states (Boahen, 1965). Their activities as well instigated a marked period of workers agitation for the end of colonial rule, racial discrimination and violation of the human rights of Africans (Malisa & Nhengeze, 2018). For example, during the late 1940s and early 1950s, in the Gold Coast, now Ghana (and many other African countries), students' protests sometimes took radical turns that drew brutal reactions from the colonial authorities.…”
Section: Students and The Process Of Decolonisation In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These efforts were all in an attempt to get governments of those countries, notably the United States of America which has suffered colonialism itself, to pressurise or rather persuade the colonial masters to grant independence to African states (Boahen, 1965). Their activities as well instigated a marked period of workers agitation for the end of colonial rule, racial discrimination and violation of the human rights of Africans (Malisa & Nhengeze, 2018). For example, during the late 1940s and early 1950s, in the Gold Coast, now Ghana (and many other African countries), students' protests sometimes took radical turns that drew brutal reactions from the colonial authorities.…”
Section: Students and The Process Of Decolonisation In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…107 Similarly to Pan-Arabism, Pan-Africanism is an anti-colonial movement that advocates for the reunification of all African territories. 108 There were no borders in Africa before European colonial powers colonised the continent and divided it among themselves in the Berlin Conference. 109 Pan-Africanism is an ideal that aimed at rectifying the devasting politics of division and separation enacted during colonial rule.…”
Section: Nationalitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The term first emerged among (formerly) enslaved people in the Americas, who appealed to the shared African origins of victims of racism and slavery so that they may join forces in their common struggles. The idea found new life in the early twentieth century as a rallying cry for Africans seeking independence from colonial powers (Malisa & Nhengeze, 2018). Political leaders of this era, including Nkrumah, saw the battle for independence as a shared struggle among African nations and worked together despite differing in their views of the forms of government and economic structure that their countries should adopt (Biney, 2011, pp.…”
Section: Colonialism In Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%