ALI A.
MAZRUI
BIOGRAPHY
ALI A. MAZRUI was born in
Mombasa, Kenya, on February 24, 1933. He is now Albert Schweitzer
Professor in the Humanities and Director of the Institute
of Global Cultural Studies at Binghamton University, State
University of New York.
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Dr.
Ali A. Mazrui
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He is also Albert Luthuli
Professor-at-Large at the University of Jos in Nigeria.
He is Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large Emeritus and Senior
Scholar in Africana Studies at Cornell University.
Dr. Mazrui has also been
appointed Chancellor of the Jomo Kenyatta University of
Agriculture and Technology in Kenya - an appointment made
by Kenya's Head of State. Mazrui was Ibn Khaldun Professor-at-Large,
Graduate School of Islamic and Social Sciences, Leesburg,
Virginia (1997-2000).
He was also Walter Rodney
Professor at the University of Guyana, Georgetown, Guyana
(1997-1998). Mazrui obtained his B.A. with Distinction from
Manchester University in England, his M.A. from Columbia
University in New York, and his doctorate from Oxford University
in England. For ten years he was at Makerere University,
Kampala, Uganda, where he served as head of the Department
of Political Science and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences.
He once served as Vice-President of the International Political
Science Association and has lectured in five continents.
Professor Mazrui also served
as professor of political science (1974-1991) and as Director
of the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies (1978-1981)
at The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. He has
also been Visiting Scholar at Stanford, Chicago, Colgate,
Singapore, Australia, Malaysia, Oxford, Harvard, Bridgewater,
Cairo, Leeds, Nairobi, Teheran, Denver, London, Ohio State,
Baghdad, McGill, Sussex, Pennsylvania, etc. Dr. Mazrui has
also served as Special Advisor to the World Bank.
He has also served on the
Board of Directors of the American Muslim Council, Washington,
D.C., and served as chair of the Board of the Center for
the Study of Islam and Democracy, Washington, D.C. He is
also on the Board of the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding,
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., and is a Fellow
of the Institute of Governance and Social Research, Jos,
Nigeria.
His more than twenty books include Towards a Pax Africana
(1967), and The Political Sociology of the English Language
(1975). He has also published a novel entitled The Trial
of Christopher Okigbo (1971). His research interests include
African politics, international political culture, political
Islam, and North-South relations.
Other books include Africa's
International Relations (Heinemann and Westview Press, 1977),
Political Values and the Educated Class in Africa (Heinemann
Educational Books and University of California Press, 1978,),
and The Political Culture of Language: Swahili, Society,
and the State, co-author Alamin M. Mazrui, (IGCS and James
Currey, 1995). His most comprehensive books include A World
Federation of Cultures: An African Perspective (published
by the Free Press in New York in 1976) and Cultural Forces
in World Politics (James Currey and Heinemann, 1990).
Among his books on language
in society is The Power of Babel: Language and Governance
in Africa's Experience (co-author Alamin M. Mazrui) (James
Currey and University of Chicago Press, 1998), which was
launched in the House of Lords, London, at a historic ceremony
saluting Mazrui's works. He and Alamin M. Mazrui have also
been working on a project on Black Reparations in the Era
of Globalization.
Dr. Mazrui has also written
for magazines and newspapers. He has been published in The
Times (London), the New York Times, the Sunday Nation (Nairobi),
Transition (Kampala and Cambridge, Mass., USA), Al-Ahram
(Cairo), The Guardian (London) and (Lagos), The Economist
(London) and the Cumhuriyet (Istanbul and Ankara), Yomiuri
Shimbun (Tokyo and Osaka), International Herald Tribune
(Paris), Elsevier (Amsterdam), Los Angeles Times Syndicate
(USA) and Afrique 2000 (Brussels and Paris).
Dr. Mazrui's most influential
articles of the last forty years have been republished by
Africa World Press in three volumes under the overall editorship
of Dr. Toyin Falola of the University of Texas. Mazrui's
Milllennium Harvard lectures have been published under the
title, The African Predicament and the American Experience:
A Tale of Two Edens (Westport and London: Praeger, 2004).
Dr. Mazrui has been awarded
honorary doctorates by several universities in disciplines
which have ranged from Divinity to Sciences of Human Development,
from Letters to Political Economy. He is also a former research
fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral
Sciences, Palo Alto, and the Hoover Institution on War,
Revolution and Peace, Stanford, California.
Professor Mazrui is married
and has five sons (Jamal, Al'Amin, Kim Abubakar, Farid Chinedu
and Harith Ekenechukwu). Dr. Mazrui is a Kenyan. One of
his sons is also Kenyan and four are U.S. citizens.
Dr. Mazrui was President
of the African Studies Association of the United States
(1978 to 1979) and Vice-President of the International Congress
of African Studies (1979-1991). He is also Vice-President
of the Royal Africa Society in London. Dr. Mazrui has been
elected an Honorary Fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts
and Sciences, and member of the College of Fellows of the
International Association of Middle Eastern Studies.
In 1979 Dr. Mazrui delivered
the prestigious annual Reith Lectures of the British Broadcasting
Corporation (named about the founder Director-General of
the BBC, Lord Reith). The lectures (entitled The African
Condition) have since been repeatedly reprinted by Cambridge
University Press. Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, USA,
has elected him an Icon of the Twentieth Century. Morgan
State University in Baltimore, Maryland, has extended to
him the DuBois-Garvey Award for Pan-African Unity. In 1999
he gave the Eric Williams Memorial lecture sponsored by
the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago. Dr. Mazrui has
been received by Heads of State in Africa, the Muslim world
and elsewhere.
In 1998 Professor Mazrui
was elected to the Board of Trustees of the Oxford Centre
for Islamic Studies, England, and to the Board of Directors
of the National Summit on Africa, Washington, D.C.. The
year 1998 also marked the publication of the first comprehensive
annotated bibliography of all Mazrui's works (printed and
electronic) from 1962 to 1997 [The Mazruiana Collection,
compiled by Abdul S. Bemath, and published by Sterling in
New Delhi and Africa World Press in New Jersey]. Another
book entitled The Global African: A Portrait of Ali A. Mazrui,
edited by Omari H. Kokole, had also been published by Africa
World Press in 1998.
Dr. Mazrui's television
work includes the widely discussed 1986 series The Africans:
A Triple Heritage, (BBC and PBS). A book by the same title
has been jointly published by BBC Publications and Little,
Brown and Company. In 1986 the book was a best seller in
Britain and was adopted or recommended by various Book Clubs
in the U.S.A., including the Book of the Month Club. Dr.
Mazrui has also published hundreds of articles in five continents.
The wide range of journals
in which Dr. Mazrui has been published since 1990 alone
include International Affairs (London), Internationle Politik
(Bonn), East African Journal of Peace and Human Rights (Kampala),
Kajian Malaysia (Penang), International Journal of the Sociology
of Language (Berlin), Islamic Studies (Islamabad), Foreign
Affairs (New York), Revue Africaine de Developpement (Abidjan),
International Journal of Refugee Law (New York), and International
Political Science Journal (Oxford).
Ali Mazrui is widely consulted
on many issues including constitutional change and educational
reform. Dr. Mazrui has been involved in a number of UN projects
on matters which have ranged from human rights to nuclear
proliferation. He is also internationally consulted on Islamic
culture and Muslim history. He is editor of Volume VIII
(Africa since 1935) of the UNESCO General History of Africa
(1993).
He has also served as Expert
Advisor to the United Nations Commission on Transnational
Corporations. Professor Mazrui has served on the editorial
boards of more than twenty international scholarly journals.
He won the Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award of The
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and the Distinguished
Africanist Award of the African Studies Association of the
USA. He is a member of the Royal Commonwealth Trust and
the Atheneum Club (London) and the United Kenya Club (Nairobi).
Dr. Mazrui's services to
the Organization of African Unity and the African Union
include membership of the Group of Eminent Persons appointed
in 1992 by the O.A.U. Presidential Summit to explore the
issues of African Reparations for Enslavement and Colonization.
He was also among the Eminent Personalities who advised
on the transition form the OAU to the African Union (2002).