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Dr. Veit Arlt

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Profiles & Affiliations

Profil

Veit Arlt is the Executive Secretary of the Centre for African Studies Basel and in this function coordinates the Master's program African Studies as well as the Graduate Network African Studies Basel.

Veit did his studies in History and Geography at the University of Basel and in 2005 earned his PhD with a thesis on the history of Ghana. Besides his job at the Centre for African Studies he is also active in the field of event management and since 2002 has been organising African music in Basel. While the first projects featured palm wine music from Ghana, he now focuses on Jazz from South Africa.

Selected Publications

Arlt, Veit, Bishop, Stephanie, & Schmid, Pascal. (2015). Explorations in African History : reading Patrick Harries. Basler Afrika Bibliographien.

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Obrist, Brigit, Arlt, Veit, & Macamo, Elisio. (2013). Living the city in Africa : processes of invention and intervention. In Schweizerische Afrikastudien: Vol. Bd. 10. LIT Verlag.

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Arlt, Veit, & Quarcoopome, Nii. (2010). Photography, European Emblems and Statecraft in Manya Krobo (Ghana), about 1800-1939. In Keller, Andreas; Quarcoopome, Nii  (Ed.), Through african eyes: the European in African art, 1500 to Present (p. S. 61–74). Detroit Institute of Arts.

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Arlt, Veit. (2005). Christianity, Imperialism and Culture. The Expansion of the two Krobo States, c.1830-1930. (; Harries Patrick, Trans.) [Dissertation]. http://www.unibas.ch⁄diss⁄2005⁄DissB_7185.htm

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Albrecht, Michael, Arlt, Veit, Müller, Barbara, & Schneider, Jürg. (2004). Getting pictures right : context and interpretation. In Topics in African studies (Vol. 3). Rüdiger Köppe Verlag.

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Selected Projects & Collaborations

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7th European Conference on African Studies: Urban Africa - Urban Africans. New encounters of the rural and the urban

Research Project  | 6 Project Members

At 3.5% Africa has the highest urbanization rate in the whole world. The potential effects of these staggering growth rates are relevant for all Africans, both in the urban as well as in the rural areas. By 2040 the continent's cities are expected to have to accommodate 79 Million additional inhabitants. Between 2040 and 2050 the figure will rise to a staggering 84 Million. The latest UN-Habitat report forecasts that by 2025 Africa's urban population will outstrip that of Europe and Latin America together. No wonder that a growing number of researchers, institutions and governments are paying more and more attention to urbanization in Africa. This growing interest focuses on whether rapid urbanization will overwhelm African governments and societies or whether it reflects the increasing importance of the middle classes, a factor which is held by many to account for Africa's positive economic performance of late. African urbanization trends raise several issues that are of interest to scholars. These range from politics (what does the growing importance of city dwellers mean to the character of politics?), through economics (will urbanization undermine or foster efforts at overcoming inequalities?), all the way to social (e.g. are African social relations changing in any significant way as a result of these trends? How do Africans live their cities?) and cultural issues (e.g. will urban life styles dominate the rural? How will the rural and the urban relate to each other in the future?). The key issue, however, is how urbanization processes in Africa transform conventional objects of African Studies and how do scholars of Africa gear up to face such changes? This is the question which the Centre for African Studies at the University of Basel (CASB) in Switzerland wishes to invite scholars of Africa to engage with in a more conscious and systematic manner. While the urban will be prominent, the proposed conference theme will also look into the entanglements of the rural with the urban, especially with a view to addressing an implicit assumption underlying the study of Africa and which concerns the supposed rural 'nature' of the continent as well as the constitutive nature of the tension between tradition and modernity. While over the past few decades a self-critical attitude within many disciplines has led to a weakening of these assumptions, the urban continues arguably to be seen as the exception or, at any rate, as analytically less consequential than the rural. ECAS 2017 "Urban Africa - Urban Africans" will, therefore, be an occasion for rethinking African Studies, but also for exploring and deepening research avenues that many researchers working on urban and rural issues have taken up over recent years. There is a critical mass to be harnessed in the effort to push the frontiers of critical European knowledge production on Africa. Over 1300 participants attended this convention organised by the Centre for African Studies Basel and the Swiss Society for African Studies on behalf of the Research Network of African Studies Centres in Europe AEGIS . They presented 1020 papers in 204 thematic panels and engaged in 10 round table discussions, 18 book launches, 13 film screenings and 13 meetings and were inspired by 4 keynote lectures.