Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Africa’s Science and Technology Strategy in the Thought of Kwame Nkrumah


Affiliations
1 North Carolina State University, United States
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


This paper explores the African Union's ("AU") science and technology plan and strategy for Africa within the construct of Kwame Nkrumah's socio-political thought. Nkrumah was one of Africa's most important political and intellectual agitators of the 20th century. He was Ghana's first prime minister and president, and a founding member of the African Union's forerunner, the Organization of African Unity. An Africa, unified, modernized and developedwith science and technology for the benefit of all Africans, was the vision he strived for. The paper argues that while the AU is working towardsto achieve Nkrumah's vision and quotes him prominently, their approach to the plan betrays an ideological conception for Africa's development that is in contradiction with Nkrumah's vision by, a) the S&T plan's ahistorical vision statement, b) exclusion of the African majority from the process, c) baring primarily the interests of the African elites and global corporation by its reliance on foreign aid and capital, and c) Planning and policy omissions in the continent's fastest growing area of technology adoption. Nkrumah's worldview and development thinking used to examine the African Union's strategy is explained with both classical and contemporary sociological theories and philosophy.

Keywords

Science and Technology, Africa, African Union, Kwame Nkrumah, Pan-Africanism.
User
Subscription Login to verify subscription
Notifications
Font Size

Abstract Views: 266

PDF Views: 0




  • Africa’s Science and Technology Strategy in the Thought of Kwame Nkrumah

Abstract Views: 266  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Lloyd Delroy McCarthy
North Carolina State University, United States

Abstract


This paper explores the African Union's ("AU") science and technology plan and strategy for Africa within the construct of Kwame Nkrumah's socio-political thought. Nkrumah was one of Africa's most important political and intellectual agitators of the 20th century. He was Ghana's first prime minister and president, and a founding member of the African Union's forerunner, the Organization of African Unity. An Africa, unified, modernized and developedwith science and technology for the benefit of all Africans, was the vision he strived for. The paper argues that while the AU is working towardsto achieve Nkrumah's vision and quotes him prominently, their approach to the plan betrays an ideological conception for Africa's development that is in contradiction with Nkrumah's vision by, a) the S&T plan's ahistorical vision statement, b) exclusion of the African majority from the process, c) baring primarily the interests of the African elites and global corporation by its reliance on foreign aid and capital, and c) Planning and policy omissions in the continent's fastest growing area of technology adoption. Nkrumah's worldview and development thinking used to examine the African Union's strategy is explained with both classical and contemporary sociological theories and philosophy.

Keywords


Science and Technology, Africa, African Union, Kwame Nkrumah, Pan-Africanism.