Abstract

This article asks questions about power and partnership in disability research in Africa. Research has been located too much in one type of organisation or another and not sufficiently in the interaction between a range of legitimate stakeholders. Across Africa and Europe, and government and civil society dialogues, the African development research agenda must be owned by Africans. Fully inclusive national and international research partnerships are crucial, but they must be driven from Africa. European constructions of and interventions concerning people with disability have often been inhumane, seeking to eliminate them from society. African cultures have also stigmatised people with disability. I call for a new African-driven research agenda that promotes the human rights of people with disability, and has people with disability not only participating in this research, but directing it. The Southern African Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD) Research Programme (SRP) is breaking new ground in this regard by allowing ‘the researched’ to become ‘the researcher’.

Highlights

  • Note: This article is an adaptation of a previous news item on the Southern African Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD) website called ‘Research support and development in Africa – A view from civil society’

  • Across Africa and Europe, and government and civil society dialogues, the African development research agenda must be owned by Africans

  • I call for a new Africandriven research agenda that promotes the human rights of people with disability, and has people with disability participating in this research, but directing it

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Summary

The context for this posthumous contribution

In November 2011, the third African Network for Evidence-to-Action on Disability (AfriNEAD) symposium, with the theme ‘building communities of trust’, was held in Zimbabwe. This AfriNEAD symposium was hosted by the Southern African Federation of the Disabled (SAFOD). Mr Alexander Mwanza Phiri, the CEO of SAFOD, was a critical role player in the preparations for hosting this symposium. We share this article as his legacy and an attempt to continue the dialogue of building communities of trust. Mac MacLachlan (Trinity College Dublin) and Dr Gubela Mji (Stellenbosch University)

Questioning research on disability and development
Researching as an interdependence entity
Owning the African research agenda
Challenging European agendas
Disability rights and research participation
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