Amina Mama
During my student days in the 1980’s, I joined the socialist feminist national organization Women in Nigeria and took up community activism in London, developing an appreciation of the power of activist research in the process.
I spent the 1990’s and 2000’s working with colleagues to develop feminist studies in Africa, first in Nigeria and then at the African Gender Institute in Cape Town South Africa, until 2009. I remain involved with African and international feminism through various movement affiliations and career choices, and am currently working with colleagues in West Africa to develop a transnational activist research project to address gender transformations in militarized and conflict prone contexts.
I strive to honor my core commitment to women’s liberation and social justice for all in my personal life and relationships, as well as in my professional life. I strongly believe in building strong feminist networks, and in pushing mainstream movements to take feminist analyses and methodologies more seriously.
Amina Mama is founding Editor of Feminist Africa (www.feministafrica.org) and Chair of the Board of Directors of the Global Fund for Women. She holds a full time day job as the Director of Women and Gender Studies at the University of California, Davis.
Selections of Published Articles
Towards Academic Freedom for Africa in the 21st Century
Challenging Subjects: Gender and Power in African Context
Demythologising Gender in Development: Feminist Studies in African Contexts
Feminist Studies in the African Contexts: The Challenge of Transformative Teaching in African Universities
Is It Ethical to Study Africa? Preliminary Thoughts on Scholarship and Freedom
Khaki in the Family: Gender Discources and Militarism in Nigeria
Restore, Reform but do not Transform: The Gender Politics of Higher Education in Africa
Strengthening Civil Society: Participatory Action Research in Militarised State
Violence against Black Women: Gender, Race and State Responses
