Amílcar Cabral Prize 2022

Deadline: 31 January 2023
Institution: Institute of Contemporary History & Padrão dos Descobrimentos — EGEAC
RULES
- The Amílcar Cabral Prize (hereafter the Prize) is open to researchers of any nationality who are recent recipients of doctoral degrees from any national or international university.
- The Prize is granted annually with the Jury able to deliberate its non-attribution whenever the works submitted do so justify this decision.
- The Prize is designed to honour historical research articles that deal with any topic or issue relating to the history of anti-colonial resistance and colonial empires. The respective article may focus on any world geographic context and any historical period, from contemporary times back to the 15th century.
- The articles submitted should be authored solely the respective candidate and published or accepted for publication in an academic journal (necessarily indexed in either the SCOPUS or the Web of Science databases) with peer review and in either the Portuguese or English languages.
- The candidate(s) should have concluded their respective doctoral degrees within the three calendar years preceding the closing date of the award.
- Eligible for the second edition of the Prize are doctoral degree holders that defended their PhD after 30 January 2020, with all applications to be submitted prior to 31 January 2023. The results of this year’s Prize shall be announced and communicated before 15 April 2023.
- Applications are made in the form of a request to the President of the Jury, including 1) a declaration stating the acceptance of the deliberations of the Jury as regards the respective award, 2) the identification of the respective author(s), 3) a copy of the doctoral degree diploma (or equivalent document) and 4) the article submitted to the competition (and, whenever necessary, proof it has been duly accepted for publication).
- Candidates should submit their applications via email to ihc.concursos@fcsh.unl.pt.
- The Prize covers the cost of travel and accommodation in Lisbon for a period of one month in addition to other living costs (up to a maximum amount of € 3,000 — three thousand euros).
- On the second edition of this Prize, the stay in Lisbon shall take place during the year of 2023 on dates and under circumstances to be agreed uppon between the parties. During this period, the prize winner is to develop their scientific and cultural activities at NOVA FCSH and EGEAC facilities, specifically in the Monument to the Discoveries (Padrão dos Descobrimentos).
- For the second edition of this Prize, the Jury is:
a.Manuela Ribeiro Sanches (IHC — NOVA FCSH) — President;
b.Victor Barros (École des Hautes Études Hispaniques et Ibériques at Casa de Velázquez) — Member;
c.Rui Gomes Coelho (Durham University) — Member; d.Marta Macedo (IHC — NOVA FCSH) — Reserve Member. - The deliberations of the Jury are made by a majority decision and always excluding abstention as an option.
- This also excludes the scope for any shared attribution of this Prize. 14.The decision of the Jury is definitive and without any scope for appeal.
You may download the Rules of the Prize HERE (📎 PDF).
Other Opportunities
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Opportunities, Other institutionsDeadline: 27 January 2023
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janeiro, 2023
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Detalhes do Evento
Conference that intends to frame the individual activism in the most recent scholarship that conceives the solidarity against Portuguese colonialism as part of a transnational movement. Deadline: 25 July
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Detalhes do Evento
Conference that intends to frame the individual activism in the most recent scholarship that conceives the solidarity against Portuguese colonialism as part of a transnational movement. Deadline: 25 July
Anticolonial Struggle, Transnational Solidarity and Agency of Individual Actors:
Dialogues with the Portuguese Colonies, 1945-1975
Basil Davidson, a British journalist, took interest in African history from 1951 onward and went on to write about the struggle of the national liberation movements from Portuguese colonies. By the middle of the decade, Ben Barka and other Moroccan students engaged in the struggle for the independence of their country encountered Aquino de Bragança, Edmundo Rocha and Marcelino dos Santos in Paris, where they were pursuing their university studies, and these contacts facilitated later the establishment of the Conference of Nationalist Organizations of the Portuguese Colonies’ (CONCP) permanent Secretariat in Rabat. Jean Mettas, a French anticolonial activist during the Algerian war for independence, came across Amílcar Cabral in Dakar, in 1962, and due to their friendship was one of the first activists to publicize in France the struggle for independence of Guinea-Bissau. Years later, in 1967, at a dinner organized by South African exiles in Kenia, the African American lawyer Robert van Lierop met Eduardo Mondlane and together they conceived the idea of producing, for American audiences, the film A Luta Continua about the armed struggle in Mozambique.
These are few examples of how personal connections, established in places serving as hubs of decolonization–for instance Lisbon, Paris, London and Rome, but also the newly-independent African countries–were instrumental for the solidarity towards the struggle for independence of Portuguese colonies. Not only the liberation movements actively sought to cultivate personal contacts to internationalize their liberation struggles, but a wide variety of actors from across the globe voluntarily engaged in complex relationships with the anticolonialists from Portuguese colonies. Journalists, academics, film-makers, missionaries, priests, doctors, intellectuals and students, to name a few, became activists, fuelling anticolonial and anti-racist discourses for international audiences and attracting material and non-material resources for the liberation movements. Even Portuguese opponents to the Estado Novo regime, exiles, emigrants and military deserters living for instance in Algeria, France, Brazil and Morocco played a role in the international debate on Portuguese colonialism and interacted with the liberation movements. In many circumstances, the activists were at the centre of campaigns to support the national liberation movements, acting on an individual capacity. Sometimes they brought with them a web of connections, helping to create formal and informal networks of support such as the anticolonial solidarity groups.
Nevertheless, while the role of governments, non-governmental organizations, and international organizations in the solidarity towards the liberation movements from Portuguese colonies has received an increasing attention, the agency of individual figures needs to be explored in greater depth to strengthen our knowledge on the subject. To expand the parameters of inquiry on solidarity to individual players who engaged in the support of the struggle against Portuguese colonialism from 1945 until 1975, the Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA University of Lisbon and the University of Florence will organize a conference to be held in Lisbon between 26-27 January 2023. The conference intends to frame the individual activism in the most recent scholarship that conceives the solidarity against Portuguese colonialism as part of a transnational movement, nurtured by multiple ties and interactions across state frontiers.
>> 📎 Download full programme (PDF) <<
Call for papers
>> 📎 Download the call for papers (PDF) <<
Proposals for 20-minute presentations on issues related to individual solidarity will be accepted, including but not limited to the following topics:
-The schemes, plans of action and approaches devised by individual figures to link with the liberation movements.
-The many different forms of connections established between individual activists and the liberation movements.
-The networks of support to the liberation movements shaped by individual connections.
-The ways in which countries around the world–specially the newly-independent African countries–became platforms for contacts between the liberation movements and individual actors.
-The strategies used by individuals to influence public opinion, advance the cause of the liberation movements and transform the policies of their own governments.
-The personal trajectories of the individual activists and the paper trail they produced.
Abstracts of presentations (300 words) and biographical notes (250 words) should be sent to: anticolonialstruggleactors@gmail.com
Deadline for submission of abstracts: 25 July 2022
Notification of acceptance: 15 September 2022
Working language: English.
The organizers foresee the publication of the communications.
Keynote speaker
Rob Skinner (University of Bristol)
Organizing Committee
Alba Martín Luque (University of Florence)
Aurora Almada e Santos (IHC — NOVA University of Lisbon / IN2PAST)
João Miguel Almeida (IHC — NOVA University of Lisbon / IN2PAST)
Miguel Filipe Silva (IHC — NOVA University of Lisbon / IN2PAST)
Rebeca Ávila (IHC — NOVA University of Lisbon / IN2PAST)
Scientific Committee
Alda Romão Saúte Saíde (Universidade Pedagógica de Maputo)
Ângela Coutinho (IPRI — NOVA University of Lisbon)
Conceição Neto (Universidade Agostinho Neto)
Eric Burton (University of Innsbruck)
Jean-Michel Mabeko-Tali (Howard University)
Julião Soares Sousa (CEIS20 — University of Coimbra)
Víctor Barros (IHC — NOVA University of Lisbon / IN2PAST)
Picture: Basil Davidson and Agostinho Neto in Moxico, Angola (© Basil Davidson, 1970)
Tempo
26 (Quinta-feira) 10:00 am - 27 (Sexta-feira) 5:00 pm
Localização
Dedicated Zoom link
Organizador
Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanitiescomunicacao.ihc@fcsh.unl.pt Avenida de Berna, 26C - 1069-061 Lisbon
News
Victor Pereira receives Aristides de Sousa Mendes Award
Dec 8, 2022
Victor Pereira was one of the winners of the 2022 edition of the Aristides de Sousa Mendes Award.
IHC Contributes to the Memory of Portuguese Diplomacy
Dec 5, 2022
The website of the project Oral Memory of Portuguese Diplomacy has been published.
Fernando Ampudia de Haro — In Memoriam
Dec 3, 2022
Note of regret of the Board of Directors of the IHC on the passing of Fernando Ampudia de Haro.
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