Campus
- Scarborough (UTSC)
Fields of Study
- International Relations
- Development Studies
Areas of Interest
- African Politics and systems of thought
- Politics of Knowledge Production
- Political economy of violence, conflict, and development
- Postcolonial and decolonial approaches
Biography
He is the author of Epistemologies of African Conflicts: Violence, Evolutionism, and the War in Sierra Leone (2012), which won the ATWS Toyin Falola Africa Book Award for 2013, and co-editor (with Marta IƱiguez de Heredia) of Recentering Africa in International Relations: Beyond Lack, Peripherality, and Failure (2018). His research takes up epistemological questions regarding the nature, conditions, and limits of disciplinary knowledge and practices in International Relations, Development Studies, Conflict and Security Studies, and African Studies. Specifically, he focuses on how the intersections of power and coloniality frame the discourses and political economy of knowledge, violence, conflict, development, and state formation in Africa, and the Global South more broadly. His most recent book, Thinking the Colonial Library: Mudimbe, Gnosis, and the Predicament of Africanist Knowledge, which will be published by Routledge early next year, interrogates the contaminating vectors of the colonial archive and its implications for epistemic decolonisation