Africanization
- Africanization can also refer to Africanized "killer" bees.
Africanization or Africanisation (lit., making something African) has been applied in various contexts, notably in geographic and personal naming and in the composition of the civil service e.g. via processes such as indigenization.[1]
Africanization of names
Africanization has referred to the modification of place names and personal names to reflect an "African" identity. In some cases, changes are not a change of transliteration rather than of the European name.[2]
In many cases during the colonial period, African place names were Anglicized or Francized.
Place names
Country names
Various African countries have undergone name changes during the previous century as the result of consolidations and secessions, territories gaining sovereignty, and regime changes.
Previous name | Year | Current name |
---|---|---|
Dahomey, Republic of | 1975 | Benin, Republic of |
Bechuanaland Protectorate | 1966 | Botswana, Republic of |
Upper Volta | 1984 | Burkina Faso |
Oubangui-Chari | 1960 | Central African Republic |
Zaire, Republic of | 1997 | Congo, Democratic Republic of the |
Middle Congo | 1960 | Congo, Republic of the |
Spanish Guinea | 1968 | Equatorial Guinea, Republic of |
Gold Coast | 1957 | Ghana, Republic of |
French West Africa (part of) | 1958 | Guinea, Republic of |
Portuguese Guinea | 1974 | Guinea-Bissau, Republic of |
Basutoland, Territory of | 1966 | Lesotho, Kingdom of |
Nyasaland Protectorate | 1964 | Malawi, Republic of |
French Sudan | 1960 | Mali, Republic of |
South West Africa | 1990 | Namibia, Republic of |
German East Africa / Ruanda-Urundi | 1962 | Rwanda, Republic of / Burundi, Republic of |
Zanzibar / Tanganyika | 1964 | Tanzania, United Republic of |
Buganda | 1962 | Uganda, Republic of |
Northern Rhodesia | 1964 | Zambia, Republic of |
Southern Rhodesia | 1980 | Zimbabwe, Republic of |
Other place names
- Fernando Po island changed to Bioko Island
- Léopoldville changed to Kinshasa
- Salisbury changed to Harare
- Lourenço Marques changed to Maputo
- Nova Lisboa changed to Huambo
- Fort Lamy changed to N'Djaména
- Tananarive changed to Antananarivo
- Bathurst changed to Banjul
- Santa Isabel changed to Malabo
- Many names of European origin in South Africa have undergone Africanization since 1994, see South African Geographical Names Council.
Personal names
- Joseph-Désiré Mobutu changed to Mobutu Sese Seko
- François Tombalbaye changed to N'Garta Tombalbaye
- Étienne Eyadéma changed to Gnassingbé Eyadéma
- Francisco Macías Nguema changed to Masie Nguema Biyogo Ñegue Ndong
Other name changes take place when an African person converts to or from Islam or another religion. (See Islamic name.)
Examples:
- Albert-Bernard Bongo changed to Omar Bongo
- Dawda Jawara changed to David Jawara in 1953
- Jean-Bédel Bokassa changed to Salah Eddine Ahmed Bokassa
Africanization of civil services
In some countries immediately following their independence, "Africanization" was the name given to racial policies, affirmative action intended to increase the number of Africans in civil service (which had historically been dominated by whites[3] or Asians.[4])
Localization in African languages
The term Africanization, abbreviated as the numeronym "A12n," has been applied to discussion of internationalization and localization of software and content in African languages.
References
- ↑ African Successes Four Public Managers of Kenyan Rural Development David K. Leonard UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
- ↑ Edgar A. Gregersen (1977). Language in Africa: An Introductory Survey. CRC Press. ISBN 0-677-04380-5.
- ↑ Adedeji, Adebayo. "Comparative strategies of economic decolonization of Africa." In Ali AlʼAmin Mazrui and Christophe Wondji, eds. Africa Since 1935. UNESCO
- ↑ Pp.176-178. Goans of the North Atlantic: A Transnational Study of Migration, Technology Adoption, and Neoculturation across Six Generations by Clifford Pereira in Migration, technology and Transculturation: Global Perspective. Edited by Myna German and Padmini Banerjee. Center for International and Global Studies. Lindenwood University Press. St. Charles. Mo. USA
See also
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