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06 May 2021 | Story Prof Danie Brand | Photo Supplied
Prof Serges Djoyou Kamga.

Prof Serges Djoyou Kamga, Extraordinary Professor in the Free State Centre for Human Rights (FSCHR) at the University of the Free State (UFS), has been awarded the prestigious Ali Mazrui Award for Scholarship and Research Excellence for 2021. Prof Kamga received this distinction, awarded by the University of Texas at Austin, during the 20th Africa Conference, held from 1 to 4 April 2021.

The Ali Mazrui Award is intended to encourage scholarly commitment to the development and propagation of knowledge that advances the cause of Africa. It recognises contributions to research on Africa and is awarded to an African scholar, whether at home or in the Diaspora, who has distinguished her/himself in this respect.

Prof Kamga, who – apart from his affiliation to the UFS through the FSCHR – is a professor in the Thabo Mbeki African School of Public and International Affairs at Unisa, and is a leading scholar on human rights in Africa. His focus is in particular on the right to development in Africa; human rights in cross-cultural perspectives; and disability rights. He approaches his work from an interdisciplinary angle, examining the links between law, economics, development, and international politics, with a special concern for poverty and inequality and the place of Africa in global justice.

An NRF-rated researcher, he has published widely in accredited journals and has also published a number of books, including The right to development in the African human rights system (Routledge 2018); Migration and regional integration in Africa: lessons from Southern and West Africa (as co-author) (CODESRIA-BRILL Press 2020); and as editor or co-editor, The right to development in Africa: issues, constraints and prospects (Pan-African University Press 2020); Insights into policies and practices on the right to development (Rowman & Littlefield International 2020); Concrétisation du Droit au Développement en Afrique – Le Cas du Cameroun: Défis, Enjeux et Opportunités (Pretoria University Law Press 2020); Perspectives on the right to development (Pretoria University Press 2018); Power, development and institutions in Africa (Pan-African University Press 2019); and Re-awakening and shaping Africa’s future in a globalised world (African World Press 2019). He is co-editor of two academic journals: The African Disability Rights Yearbook and Cross-Cultural Human Rights Review.

Prof Kamga joined the Free State Centre for Human Rights as extraordinary professor in 2018 and has since been actively involved in the centre’s research focus group on the right to development in Africa. He has also co-published regularly with members of the centre.

The FSCHR extends its hearty congratulations to Prof Kamga on this well-deserved honour.

News Archive

UFS first tertiary institution in SA to form association with the Arbinger Institute
2008-02-15

 

 A two-day seminar entitled: "The Choice and The Choice @ Work" was recently presented in Bloemfontein to companies in the Free State region. Here are, from the left: Mr Braam Botha (Well @ Work), Mr Jozef Myburgh (Telkom), and Dr Cobus Pienaar (from the Department of Industrial Psychology at the UFS and facilitator of the Arbinger Programme).
Photo: Lacea Loader

 

UFS first tertiary institution in SA to form association with the Arbinger Institute

The University of the Free State (UFS) has become the first tertiary institution in the country to form an association with the Arbinger Institute in the United States of America (USA).

“The Arbinger Institute is a global management training and consulting firm applying the implications of self-deception and its solutions to all aspects of organisational performance. Our association with this Institute is a major step for the development of leadership in the country,” says Mr Danie Jacobs, Head of the Centre for Business Dynamics at the UFS.

Dr Cobus Pienaar, from the Department of Industrial Psychology at the UFS, is currently the only licensed facilitator to present Arbinger’s work in South Africa. Dr Pienaar presents The Choice and The Choice @ Work programme on behalf of the Centre for Business Dynamics, under the banner of the UFS School of Business.

According to Mr Jacobs, the programme has already had successes in South Africa. “Dr Pienaar presented the first programme last year in Bloemfontein and Pretoria to leaders from various companies. The feedback on the application of the programme to the South African business environment was phenomenal,” says Mr Jacobs.

The Arbinger Institute’s change work grows out of the scholarly work of philosopher Terry Warner. With an international team of scholars, Warner has broken new ground in solving the age-old problem of self-deception, or what was originally called “resistance”.

“This phenomenon is at the heart of much organisational failure. It is the reason why many organisational problems seem so intractable at their core – they are in self-deception; they resist solution,” says Mr Jacobs.

Media release
Issued by: Lacea Loader
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel: 051 401 2584
Cell: 083 645 2454
E-mail: loaderl.stg@ufs.ac.za  
15 February 2008

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