Dr. Lamine Doumbia
Profil
Forschungsthemen2
Where have all the Workers Gone? Labour and Work in Ghana, 1951-2010
Quelle ↗Förderer: DFG Sachbeihilfe Zeitraum: 09/2022 - 11/2025 Projektleitung: Dr. Lamine Doumbia
Wo sind all die Arbeiter geblieben? Arbeit und Beschäftigung in Ghana, 1951–2010
Quelle ↗Förderer: DFG Sachbeihilfe Zeitraum: 11/2025 - 05/2026 Projektleitung: Dr. Lamine Doumbia
Mögliche Industrie-Partner10
Stand: 26.4.2026, 19:48:44 (Top-K=20, Min-Cosine=0.4)
- 3 Treffer54.0%
- Gesehen und gehört: Die Stimmen junger Menschen und das Recht auf freie MeinungsäußerungP54.0%
- Gesehen und gehört: Die Stimmen junger Menschen und das Recht auf freie Meinungsäußerung
- 5 Treffer53.4%
- EU: Observatory for Political Texts in European Democracies: A European Research Infrastructure (OPTED)P53.4%
- EU: Observatory for Political Texts in European Democracies: A European Research Infrastructure (OPTED)
- 3 Treffer53.2%
- 100 JAHRE JAMES KRÜSS: NARRATIVE UND PERSPEKTIVIERUNGEN ZU WERK UND AUTOR IM KONTEXT VON GESCHICHTE, SPRACHE UND DEN KÜNSTENP53.2%
- 100 JAHRE JAMES KRÜSS: NARRATIVE UND PERSPEKTIVIERUNGEN ZU WERK UND AUTOR IM KONTEXT VON GESCHICHTE, SPRACHE UND DEN KÜNSTEN
- 2 Treffer52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- 2 Treffer52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- 2 Treffer52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- 2 Treffer52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- 2 Treffer52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over EuropeP52.1%
- Ark of Inquiry: Inquiry Activities for Youth over Europe
- 7 Treffer51.8%
- Wealth & Space - Contested geographies of wealth (re-)production in Latin AmericaP51.8%
- IGRK 2445: Temporalitäten von Zukunft in Lateinamerika: Dynamiken der Aspiration und AntizipationP49.5%
- Wealth & Space - Contested geographies of wealth (re-)production in Latin America
Publikationen16
Top 25 nach Zitationen — Quelle: OpenAlex (BAAI/bge-m3 embedded für Matching).
Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue canadienne des études africaines · 5 Zitationen · DOI
Africa Spectrum · 3 Zitationen · DOI
Decentralisation in sub-Saharan Africa promises to build responsive institutions, hold officials to account and promote popular participation. Still, existent studies ignore the everyday interface between decentralised structures and citizens, as well as how decentralised institutions function in relation to their local contexts and other “authorities” on the margins. These contexts shape service provision and the impact of local power structures on local communities. Against this backdrop, our conference in Dakar, Senegal, on “Dynamics of Everyday Life within Municipal Administrations in Francophone and Anglophone Africa,” which took place in May 2019, demonstrated three key points of interest: namely, how actors within local bureaucracies interface with those who are outside; how ordinary citizens appropriate the bureaucratic techniques of the state and how these actors negotiate and adapt to the daily practices of municipal administrations. In general, decentralisation is not simply implemented, rather, it creates new frameworks and spaces for both formal and informal public action.
Economic geography · 2 Zitationen · DOI
African histories and modernities · 2 Zitationen · DOI
Modern Africa Politics History and Society · 2 Zitationen · DOI
The question of the practice of urban land in Bamako is the subject of a crucial (in-)security, which is based both on bureaucratic imbroglio and on an epistemological difference of regularisations of access to the ground through national, regional, municipal institutions and the grassroots. To put an end to the illegal occupation of urban land by the population in need of housing, the state and its representatives have undertaken urban redevelopment measures. Land speculation is taking hold where the State’s intervention capacities do not seem capable to control demographic pressure. Households have been and continue to be evicted by the authorities for projects deemed as “urban redevelopment” or “public utility.” Some citizens have regrouped in Associations that have set themselves the task of combating abuses by the state.
Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue canadienne des études africaines · 1 Zitationen · DOI
Emulations - Revue de sciences sociales · 1 Zitationen · DOI
Les associations en Afrique, comme ailleurs, n’ont eu de cesse de se multiplier (Almeida-Topor, Georg, 1989) au point que Lester L. Salamon parle déjà en 1994 d’une « révolution associationnelle globale » aussi signifiante que la montée de l’État-nation (Salamon, 1994 : 109). Le champ de recherche est bien balisé, les associations constituant un champ d’études central en sciences sociales (Agulhon, 1978 ; Cottin-Marx, 2019 ; Diop, Benoist, 2007 ; Laville, Sainsaulieu, 2004 [1997] ; Tostensen, Tvedten, Vaa, 2001). Elles sont un point d’entrée privilégié pour analyser des domaines sociaux variés (culture, santé, activité professionnelle, religion), ou les catégories de personnes qu’elles réunissent (par exemple, associations paysannes, associations de jeunes, associations féminines). De nombreux travaux se sont intéressés à la trajectoire de leurs acteurs, aux fonctions sociales qu’elles remplissent, ou encore aux associations en tant qu’espace de gouvernance intermédiaire entre l’État et les citoyens (Bierschenk, Chauveau, Olivier de Sardan, 2000 ; Blundo, Le Meur, 2009 ; Diop, Benoist, 2007 ; Tostensen, Tvedten, Vaa, 2001)...
EPub Bayreuth (University of Bayreuth) · 1 Zitationen
HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe) · 1 Zitationen
International audience
Portuguese National Funding Agency for Science, Research and Technology (RCAAP Project by FCT)
African Studies Review · DOI
This work is an excellent contribution to the fields of labor history and social anthropology of gendered agriculture and food security in Mali and the Sahel.Step by step with storytelling and folk narration, Twagira traces the history of women's intellectual production that overlaps with patterns of consumption, taste, and the aesthetics of women's technological production (21).The author takes the embodied techniques of women at the Office du Niger (Mali's ecological granary) as archival material.She shows that the techniques were appropriated through different processes of accommodation and resilience by women in moment of extreme crisis (i.e. the great Sahel drought, 1969-73).The author conducted extended field work that centers the body as a site for the production of gendered knowledge.That is to say, she relies on oral accounts that she calls testimonies, but she also observed women's work and physical movements in the everyday life at the Office du Niger.Laura Ann Twagira is an outstanding researcher keen to showcase the way technology was historically employed in West African agriculture and households and especially the Office du Niger.She has structured the book in five well elaborated chapters.Chapter One focuses on the gendered labor in the farms in rural Mali in the early decades of the twentieth century and provides the theoretical framework for embodied engineering.It also highlights the labor experiences of both men and women at the Office du Niger diachronically.Chapter Two describes the colonial body politics of labor recruitment and the problems of food production at the office.Until the mid-1940s, as the author put it, households at the Office du Niger did not produce enough food to eat.The colonial emphasis on production for export had the unforeseen consequence of suppressing the qualitative aspects of food cultivation that were relevant to local taste.This led to women's absence from labor and therefore to a demographic crisis (23).Chapter Three focuses on the women who stayed at the Office du Niger to manage a new agro-industrial environment and make it livable.Chapter Four showcases the interplay between small-scale domestic technologies and largescale industrial ones in the daily preparation of food as women started using the new metal pots, buckets, and other practical materials and technologies to ease their daily labor.Chapter Five describes the shift in the governance of the Office du Niger after Mali's independence in 1960 and the subsequent crisis of the Great Sahel Drought.
Curriculum Perspectives · DOI
Abstract Africa’s linguistic diversity and cultural richness make it an ideal setting for incorporating case studies of toponyms (place names) into the university linguistics curriculum. By examining the toponyms of Kibera slum areas in Kenya and those of the people of Sabalibougou in Southern Mali, this article explores the various ways that toponyms can be used to enhance the understanding of African languages and cultures. Based on the premise that toponyms communicate knowledge about the natural world, peoples’ experiences, indigenous and local languages, and history, the two case studies of this article highlight the following factors as reasons why toponyms should be studied and incorporated into the university’s linguistics curricula: (i) They reveal the interplay between history, socio-political manifestations, and language; (ii) provide awareness of the role of geography on language, language contact, and language endangerment; (iii) facilitate the relationship between language and culture; and (iv) allow practising orthography, phonetic transcription, and morphosemantics of African languages. Hence, incorporating toponym case studies, like those provided in this study, into the linguistics curriculum can enable students to better comprehend and appreciate Africa’s linguistic diversity and cultural richness, ultimately contributing to the decolonisation of education in Africa.
HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)
International audience
This chapter examines the African Union initiative – Network of Excellence on Land Governance in Africa (NELGA) – on the relevance of local knowledge in land governance in Bamako (Mali) as an example of decolonisation. The research is carried out to answer the question: to what extent can endogenous knowledge on land governance be decolonised through higher education? NELGA is a partner of leading African universities and research institutions with proven leadership in education, training, and research on land governance. The network set itself the objective to promote ‘good’ land governance by strengthening human and institutional capacities for the implementation of sustainable land policies in Africa. Decolonisation evokes in this paper the fact that the legal framework of Mali's State's Land Code (code domanial et foncier) is not in line with the land regulations of Malian communities. The State's Land Code is considered strange and foreign because it is mainly influenced by colonial legislation and reinforced by the independent postcolonial state. Against this backdrop, political reform in a society rejecting the socio-cultural realities rooted in this society for the benefit of foreign models of governance is the reproach of the supporters of Nko, who also campaign in civil societies.
Kooperationen1
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Where have all the Workers Gone? Labour and Work in Ghana, 1951-2010
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Stammdaten
Identität, Organisation und Kontakt aus HU-FIS.
- Name
- Dr. Lamine Doumbia
- Titel
- Dr.
- Fakultät
- Kultur-, Sozial- und Bildungswissenschaftliche Fakultät
- Institut
- Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften
- Arbeitsgruppe
- Geschichte Afrikas
- Telefon
- +49 30 2093-66074
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- 26.4.2026, 01:03:59