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FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION:
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Office of Public Affairs
(212) 207-6273
New $5 Million Investment
To Train, Support Africa’s Humanities Scholars
Fellowships Cultivate
Individuals Who Will Help Shape Continent’s Social, Cultural,
Economic Development
New
York, New York, June 30, 2008— A new $5 million investment
by Carnegie Corporation of New York will help cultivate a new generation
of African scholars in the humanities to participate in shaping
the discussion about the continent’s future as well as to
understand and interpret its history. A program will offer fellowships
to individual faculty and researchers to pursue high-quality doctoral
and postdoctoral research, provide awards enabling scholars to publish,
and help establish a network of expert advisers and peer reviewers
who will offer counsel and maintain excellence.
In announcing the new investment, Vartan Gregorian, President of
Carnegie Corporation said, “By training scholars across the
humanities, we are helping to nurture a rising generation of women
and men who will contribute to the continued development of democracy
and civil society on the African continent. There is no doubt that
science, engineering and technology are critical to development,
but they alone cannot address Africa’s many complex challenges
including deepening democracy, nurturing tolerance, consolidating
the protection of human rights, and fostering accountability of
public authorities.”
Gregorian
added that the initiative grew out of ongoing discussions with vice
chancellors at Africa’s leading universities who emphasized
the importance of the humanities to development and voiced concern
about their relative lack of funding in relation to science, engineering
and technology.
“This grant addresses a vital need,” said Pauline Yu,
president of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). “The
world needs the knowledge and understanding of human experience
that the humanities provide. We want to do our part to assure that
African scholars can contribute their distinctive perspective to
the growth of that knowledge. ACLS has been honored to partner with
the Carnegie Corporation in aiding communities of humanistic scholars
in the former Soviet Union, and we look forward to working with
the Corporation and with African colleagues on this exciting project.”
Carnegie
Corporation will provide a four-year, $5 million grant to the American
Council of Learned Societies, which will cooperate with a variety
of African institutions – universities, councils for higher
education, and other organizations working to develop scholarly
capacity in the humanities -- to organize fellowship competitions
in five countries: Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda.
The funds will support approximately 200 doctoral and postdoctoral
fellowships for researchers and current faculty who, because of
their immense teaching loads, have little time to devote to research
and publication. The awards will be of particular benefit to faculty
who have not yet completed their doctoral dissertations by funding
time out to complete the necessary research and writing.
To
complement the fellowships, the initiative will support the preparation
for publication of manuscripts resulting from postdoctoral research.
In addition to these subventions, and to facilitate the management
of the initiative, the ACLS will develop a website to facilitate
the applications process and to disseminate information about the
research and publications sponsored by awards.
The grant will also help establish a knowledge network for humanities
researchers and faculty, in part by engaging eminent scholars to
lead research-design and writing workshops, advise on program progress,
and maintain oversight of research quality. To combat the isolation
that so often plagues scholars in Africa, the initiative will promote
contact and cooperation among scholarly communities in Africa and
other parts of the world, and may include the creation of networked
teams of researchers working on issues across and within regional
boundaries.
Reflecting
on his conversations with African vice chancellors on the importance
of the humanities, Gregorian said, “As the living storehouse
of a society’s patrimony, the humanities are not a luxury,
but a vital and indispensable part of our collective consciousness.
By helping us to better understand ourselves as individuals and
as a civilization, the humanities are one of the most important
ways that we can interpret and pass on what we have learned from
our experiences in the world.”
While
building on its decade-long institutional support for universities
and libraries, Carnegie Corporation is investing in the African
Humanities Program and other initiatives to cultivate and harness
individual skills in the sciences and humanities, including a regional
initiative to help increase the number of well-trained university
faculty capable of teaching the next generation of African scientists
and engineers.
The
African Humanities Program is modeled after an ACLS humanities program
in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, also funded by Carnegie Corporation.
Created in 1998, the program has provided over 600 fellowships to
individuals doing exemplary work, so as to ensure continued future
leadership in the humanities.
About
the American Council of Learned Societies
The American Council of Learned Societies, established in 1919,
today consists of 70 professional societies of scholars committed
to the advancement of humanistic studies in all fields of learning.
Since the 1930s the ACLS has promoted international studies focusing
primarily on Eurasia, Eastern Europe and East Asia. Recently the
ACLS has begun to develop partnerships with leading African institutions
of higher education and other organizations devoted to the development
of humanities scholarship in Africa.
About
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Carnegie Corporation of New York was founded by Andrew Carnegie
in 1911 to promote “the advancement and diffusion of knowledge
and understanding.”
Under
Andrew Carnegie's will, grants must benefit the people of the United
States, although up to 7.4 percent of the funds may be used for
the same purpose in countries that are or have been members of the
British Commonwealth, with a current emphasis on Commonwealth Africa.
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