The Africa Institute, Global Studies University, congratulates Njabulo Chipangura, Restitution and Reparation: Africa and the Post-Colonial Condition Fellow, Fall 2025, on the forthcoming publication of Race, Genetics, History: New Practices, New Approaches, published by Cambridge University Press.

Njabulo Chipangura is Assistant Professor of African Anthropology at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, where he specializes in museum anthropology and heritage studies. The book is co-authored with Alexandra P. Alberda (The University of Manchester), Lara Choksey (University College London), Jerome de Groot (The University of Manchester), and Maya Sharma (Ahmed Iqbal Ullah RACE Centre and Education Trust). It explores new ways of understanding historical practice in relation to genetics, highlighting inclusive, ethical, and collaborative approaches to knowledge-making.

Set for release in November 2025 and now available for pre-orders, this multi-voiced volume underscores Chipangura’s commitment to decolonial scholarship, building on his research into heritage, museum anthropology, and social archaeology.

The Africa Institute, Global Studies University, congratulates Njabulo Chipangura, Restitution and Reparation: Africa and the Post-Colonial Condition Fellow, Fall 2025, on the forthcoming publication of Race, Genetics, History: New Practices, New Approaches, published by Cambridge University Press.

The Africa Institute, Global Studies University, congratulates Njabulo Chipangura, Restitution and Reparation: Africa and the Post-Colonial Condition Fellow, Fall 2025, on the forthcoming publication of Race, Genetics, History: New Practices, New Approaches, published by Cambridge University Press.

Njabulo Chipangura is Assistant Professor of African Anthropology at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, where he specializes in museum anthropology and heritage studies. The book is co-authored with Alexandra P. Alberda (The University of Manchester), Lara Choksey (University College London), Jerome de Groot (The University of Manchester), and Maya Sharma (Ahmed Iqbal Ullah RACE Centre and Education Trust). It explores new ways of understanding historical practice in relation to genetics, highlighting inclusive, ethical, and collaborative approaches to knowledge-making.

Set for release in November 2025 and now available for pre-orders, this multi-voiced volume underscores Chipangura’s commitment to decolonial scholarship, building on his research into heritage, museum anthropology, and social archaeology.

STAY IN TOUCH

Subscribe to our mailing list and get the latest news from The Africa Institute

FOLLOW US