Babacar Fall
Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar / Stanford Humanities Center Fellow
An African Studies Program Baobab Luncheon (by invitation only)
Labor in Senegal: Ideological Constructions and French Colonial policy
Wednesday, May 14, noon-2pm, Location TBD
With introductory comments by
Dr. Abdoul Sow, Professor and Dean, College of Education, Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar
Please contact Dennis Galvan (dgalvan@uoregon.edu) if you plan to attend.
Babacar Fall is Associate Professor of History at the Université Cheikh Anta Diop, in Dakar, Senegal, the leading institution of higher learning in francophone West Africa. His research explores the changing nature of labor relations since the colonial period. His first book, Le travail forcé en Afrique Occidentale Française : 1900 1945 (Paris: Karthala Press, 1993) details the use of forced labor as a mechanism of social control and cultural transformation in colonial West Africa. He has also published on labor market changes in the context of contemporary structural adjustment dynamics -- see his edited volume Ajustement structurel et Emploi au Sénégal, (Dakar, CODESRIA, 1996). Professor Fall has worked extensively on oral historical methods for documenting popular responses to social and economic change, publishing most recently Dialogue avec Abdoulaye Ly, historien et homme politique sénégalais (Dakar, IFAN-CAN-ENS, 2001).
Professor Fall is the founding director of the Groupe pour l'Etude et l'Enseignement de la Population (GEEP), a non-governmental organization affiliated with the Education School of the Université Cheikh Anta Diop. GEEP promotes research and direct development action designed to foster popular education and consciousness raising for development, thus putting into practice some of the key themes explored in Professor Fall's research.
Babacar Fall was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Michigan in 1989-90, and was a Scholar in Residence at the University of Oregon in May 2006, with support from African Studies, International Studies, and the Savage Endowment for International Peace. He is currently at Stanford University with a Humanities Fellowship.