UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA - AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER
Call for Paper and Panel Proposals

Call for Articles:

“Liberian Culture and State Building Processes and Institutions: What Do we Really Know?”

Liberian Studies Journal Volume 28, 2003 No. 2 

(Deadline for articles: August 31, 2003)

 

For Manuscript Submission Contact:

Al-Hassan Conteh

Editor, Liberian Studies Journal

Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict

University of Pennsylvania

St. Leonard’s Court, Suite 305

3819-33 Chestnut St.

Philadelphia, Pa 19104

Tel: (215) 573-0656

Fax: (215) 573-0653

E-Mail:alconteh@psych.upenn.edu

 

 

Some Issues and Questions:

 

The relationship between Liberian culture and the development of the Liberian state was an often-repeated issue in many discussions at the 34th Annual Meeting of the Liberian Studies Association last spring in Philadelphia.  There was the feeling among many speakers, and perhaps rightly so, that this relationship should be revisited because earlier studies were deemed inadequate in comprehending the antecedent and proximate causes of the Liberian civil war and the new imperatives in preparing for peace and building a Liberian nation-state, which might have been an “imagined community.” This concern is borne out by many recent studies on Liberia, which address the relationship between state culture and ethnicity, ethnonationalism in Liberian education, the conflict and peace processes in the Mano River sub-region, the role of religion in conflict mediation, and the value of contingency versus theoretical analysis of conflicts.   In this context, many research questions emerge whose answers can fill knowledge gaps in the search for sustainable solutions to the problems that this relationship invoke.  Some of the questions include:

 

 

The Liberian Studies Journal is dedicated to the publication of original research on social, political, economic, scientific, and other issues about Liberia or with implications for Liberia.  Opinions of contributors to the Journal do not necessarily reflect the policy of the organizations they represent or the Liberian Studies Association, publishers of the Journal.

 

Manuscript Requirements

 

Manuscripts submitted for publication should not exceed 25 typewritten, double-spaced pages, with margins of one-and-a-half inches.  The page limit includes graphs, references, tables and appendices.  Authors may, in addition to their manuscripts, submit a computer disk of their work preferably in MS Word 2000 or WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows.  Notes and references should be placed at the end of the text with headings, e.g., Notes; References.  Notes, if any, should precede the references.  The Journal is published in June and December.  Deadline for the first issue is February, and for the second, August.

 

Manuscripts should include a cover page that provides the title of the text, author’s name, address, phone number, and affiliation.  Anonymous referees will review all works.

 

Manuscripts are accepted in English and French.

 

Manuscripts must conform to the editorial style of either the Chicago Manual of Style, or The American Psychological Association (APA), or Modern Language Association (MLA).

 

The Liberian Studies Association is a non-profit, scholarly organization created to provide a means for effective cooperation among persons interested in furthering research in all scholarly disciplines, including the sciences, social sciences, and humanities, on topics relevant to the Republic of Liberia and adjacent areas; to publish and otherwise disseminate the results of such research; to cooperate with scholarly organizations, and cultural, scientific, and educational institutions, nationally and internationally, having mutual interests in the exchange and presentation of information and ideas resulting from research in the subject field; to encourage interest in Liberian affairs; and to stimulate and facilitate academic contacts and educational exchanges between Liberia and the United States.  The Liberian Studies Association produces the Liberian Studies Journal, which is published bi-annually in June and December.  It is the second oldest African studies journal published continuously in the United States.   The Liberian Studies Journal is currently produced at the University of Pennsylvania.  The headquarters of the LSA is at Fayetteville State University.   Individuals wishing to publish their articles in the Liberian Studies Journal and join the LSA should please click on the following link for LSA membership and other information:

http://spacer.uncfsu.edu/f_oyler/lsapg.htm


Editor: Ali B. Ali-Dinar
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