Amílcar Cabral – Publicações
2021:
- Laranjeiro, Catarina. Dos sonhos e das imagens. A guerra de libertação na Guiné-Bissau. Lisboa: Outro Modo, 2021. [link]
2020:
- Lopes, Rui & Victor Barros. “Amílcar Cabral and the Liberation of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde: International, Transnational, and Global Dimensions,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1230-1237. [link]
- Laranjeiro, Catarina. “The Cuban Revolution and the Liberation Struggle in Guinea-Bissau: Images, Imaginings, Expectations and Experiences,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1319-1338. [link]
- Barros, Victor. “The French Anticolonial Solidarity Movement and the Liberation of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1297-1318. [link]
- Telepneva, Natalia. “‘Code Name SEKRETÁŘ’: Amílcar Cabral, Czechoslovakia and the Role of Human Intelligence during the Cold War,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1257-1273. [link]
- Jones, Branwen Gruffydd. “Race, Culture and Liberation: African Anticolonial Thought and Practice in the Time of Decolonisation,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1238-1256. [link]
- Sousa, Julião Soares. “Amílcar Cabral, the PAIGC and the Relations with China at the Time of the Sino-Soviet Split and of Anti-Colonialism. Discourses and Praxis,” The International History Review 42 (2020): 1274-1296. [link]
- Galvão, Inês, José Neves & Rui Lopes. Análise de alguns tipos de resistência. Edição revista e comentada. Lisboa: Outro Modo, 2022. [link]
2019:
- Jones, Branwen Gruffydd. “Time, History, Politics: Anticolonial Constellations,” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 21 (2019): 592-614. [link]
- Galvão, Inês & Catarina Laranjeiro, “Gender Struggle in Guinea-Bissau: Women’s Participation On and Off the Liberation Record,” in Resistance and Colonialism: Insurgent Peoples in World History, editado por Nuno Domingos, Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo e Ricardo Roque, 85-12. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. [link]
2018:
- Martins, Leonor Pires & José Neves, “Ataque ao Quartel de Tite: Início da guerra na Guiné (1963),” in As Voltas do Passado: A guerra colonial e as lutas de libertação, organizado por Miguel Cardina e Bruno Sena Martins, 116-120. Lisboa: Tinta da China, 2018. [link]
- Neves, José. “Ideología, ciencia y pueblo en Amílcar Cabral,” Nómadas 48 (2018): 135-149. [PDF]
- Jones, Branwen Gruffydd, “African Anticolonialism in International Relations: Against the Time of Forgetting,” in Recentering Africa in International Relations. Beyond Lack, Peripherality, and Failure, editado por Marta Iñiguez de Heredia e Zubairu Wai. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. [link]
2017:
- Neves, José. “Ideologia, ciência e povo em Amílcar Cabral,” História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 24 (2017): 333-347. [PDF]
- Santos, Aurora Almada e. A Organização das Nações Unidas e a Questão Colonial Portuguesa: 1960-1974. Lisboa: Instituto da Defesa Nacional, 2017. [link]
Outros Projectos
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo e Paula Meireles
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Coordenação: Irene Flunser Pimentel
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Coordenação: Victor Pereira
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo
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Coordenação: Luís Mendonça de Carvalho
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo
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Coordenação: Manuel Loff
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Coordenação: Nuno Severiano Teixeira
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Coordenação: Raquel Varela
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Coordenação: coord
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo
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Coordenação: Ana Isabel Queiroz
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Coordenação: Maria Fernanda Rollo, José Maria Brandão de Brito e Alice Cunha
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Coordenação: Jorge Custódio
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Coordenação: Rui Lopes
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Coordenação: Rita Luís
Pesquisa
Agenda
novembro , 2025
Tipologia do Evento:
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Open calls
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Sessão de cinema
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Detalhes do Evento
Workshop que visa situar as iniciativas da OUA no seu contexto e contribuir para consolidar as análises da sua solidariedade enquanto sujeito crítico do fim do colonialismo e dos regimes
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Detalhes do Evento
Workshop que visa situar as iniciativas da OUA no seu contexto e contribuir para consolidar as análises da sua solidariedade enquanto sujeito crítico do fim do colonialismo e dos regimes de minoria branca.
The Organization of African Unity and the Struggle against Colonialism and Racism in Africa
The study of international organizations is an emerging field that covers a topic of growing importance in academia. In recent decades, the contributions of such organizations as actors in international relations have received increasing attention (Iriye 2004). Theoretical and empirical analyses seek to provide insights into the work of intergovernmental organizations, nongovernmental organizations, or transnational networks. By expanding their geographical scope beyond national borders, scholars interested in international organizations have reflected the myriad ways in which they can be studied (Hurd 2012).
The Organization of African Unity (OAU), as a regional organization, has been the subject of ongoing research (Gassama 2015). However, a review of existing publications reveals that relatively few studies have addressed the OAU’s solidarity against colonialism and racism in Africa. Several reasons may explain this situation. Comparatively, the OAU has received less attention than other international organizations, notably the United Nations. Research has mainly focused on its establishment and achievements in conflict resolution, cooperation and development (Muchie et al. 2014; Naldi 1999). Difficulties in accessing primary sources may also have contributed to the diversion of interest from the OAU’s contribution to decolonization and the end of white minority regimes.
Writing on the subject has mostly been done at the time of the events and lacks historical perspective (Binaisa 1977; El-Khawas 1978). The accounts are limited in scope, discussing primarily the OAU’s support for the liberation movements of Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa (Klotz 1995; Thomas 1996). With regard to the Portuguese colonies, with the exception of the work of Walraven (1999), it is difficult to find an overarching narrative, and the available information is mostly found in publications that do not focus on the topic as a primary concern (Sousa 2011; Tíscar Santiago 2013).
Thus, a more critical approach is needed to question what the OAU did to support the struggle against colonialism and racism in Africa, as well as the complexities and nuances involved. With this situation in mind, we intend to explore the OAU’s solidarity with the struggle against colonialism and racism in Africa in a workshop in-person and online that will take place in Lisbon, at the Institute of Contemporary History of the NOVA University of Lisbon, on 13 and 14 November 2025.
Call for papers
The workshop aims to place the OAU initiatives in their context and help consolidate analyses of its solidarity as a critical subject of the end of colonialism and white minority regimes. In addition, the workshop will contribute to rethinking the gaps in historiography by examining the OAU solidarity as a transnational phenomenon that transcended national boundaries.
We welcome proposals for 20-minute presentations on these and other topics:
- The extent to which the OAU played a role in ending colonialism and racism on the African continent;
- How the Liberation Committee was instrumental in the strategy of the OAU to undermine colonial rule and racist minority rule;
- How the attitudes of a number of states, due to inter-African competition, shaped the OAU’s policies on colonialism and racism;
- How the diplomacy of the OAU sought to shape the debate at the UN on colonialism and racism;
- How the OAU engaged with non-African countries as part of its support to the struggle for independence and against apartheid;
- How the organization worked as an intermediary in the support given by third parties to anti-colonial and anti-racist organizations;
- The importance of the relationship with the OAU for anti-colonial and anti-racist organizations to advance their agenda;
- The tensions and disagreements between the OAU and the anti-colonial and anti-racist organizations;
- The extent to which the anti-colonial and anti-racist organizations sought to use the OAU not only against the colonial and racist powers, but also to sideline competing groups.
Abstracts for presentations (200 words) and a biographical note (250 words) should be sent to: OAUconference@gmail.com
Deadline for submissions: 8 August 2025
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025
The organizers foresee the publication of the communications. The first draft of the papers is due on 30 January 2026.
>> Download the call for papers (PDF) >>
Organization:
Aurora Almada e Santos (IHC — NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST)
References:
BINAISA, Godfrey – «Organization of African Unity and Decolonization: Present and Future Trends» in The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol. 432 (1977).
EI-KHAWAS, Mohamed A. – «The Quiet Role of OAU in Africa’s Liberation» in New Directions Vol. 5, Issue 2 (1978).
GASSAMA, Muhammad – From the OAU to the AU: The Odyssey of a Continental Organization. Paris: l’Harmattan, 2015.
HURD, Ian – Choices and Methods in the Study of International Organizations. Available at <URL:http://www.unstudies.org/sites/unstudies.org/files/hurd_jios.pdf>, on 18/03/2012.
IRIYE, Akira – Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004.
KLOTZ, Audie – Norms in International Relations: The Struggle Against Apartheid. Ithaca; London: Cornell University Press, 1995.
MUCHIE, Mammo et al. (ed.) – Unite or Perish: Africa Fifty Years after the Founding of the OAU. Pretoria: Africa Institute of South Africa, 2014.
NALDI, Gino Joseph – The Organization of African Unity: An Analysis of its Role. London: Mansell, 1999.
SOUSA, Julião Soares – Amílcar Cabral (1924-1973). Vida e Morte de um Revolucionário Africano. Lisboa: Nova Vega, Lda, 2011.
THOMAS, Scott M. – The Diplomacy of Liberation: The Foreign Relations of the ANC Since 1960. London: Tauris Academic Studies, 1996.
TÍSCAR SANTIAGO, María José – Diplomacia Peninsular e Operações Secretas na Guerra Colonial. Lisboa: Edições Colibri, 2013.
WALRAVEN, Klaas van – Dreams of Power: The Role of the Organization of African Unity in the Politics of Africa. 1963-1993. Leiden: African Studies Centre, 1999.
Tempo
13 (Quinta-feira) 10:00 am - 14 (Sexta-feira) 4:00 pm
Organizador
Instituto de História Contemporânea — Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas da Universidade NOVA de Lisboacomunicacao.ihc@fcsh.unl.pt Avenida de Berna, 26C — 1069-061 Lisboa
Notícias
IHC no Dia da Investigação e Inovação da FCSH
Nov 6, 2025
A FCSH vai celebrar o Dia da Investigação e Inovação com o tema “Investigação nos Eixos”
Mélanie Toulhoat colabora em projecto da Universidade de Genebra
Out 30, 2025
Mélanie Toulhoat faz parte da equipa do projecto DEGESUD — Descentralizar as «ciências da infância»
IHC recebe oito novos contratos CEEC da FCT
Out 22, 2025
Novos contratos de investigação: quatro na categoria Júnior e quatro na categoria Auxiliar
