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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Musings on the Crucification of Unilag Journal Of Politics

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Madam thank you for your talking drum messages. Sincerely, lets help out if we can and where we can. 


On Wed, Sep 4, 2013 at 5:28 AM, dayo alao <dayoalao2002@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
Dr./ Mrs. Sotunsa. Thanks for reminding us of the roles the talking drum has played in traditional communication. Your comment is also a reminder that the talking drum has served as useful instrument of crisis resolution as carefully demonstrated by the poetic verses of drum expert. The talking drum has talked and we need to be reminded that the Unilag Journal of Politics has played significant roles in the past in providing useful forum for political discuss in which notable political scholars and researchers have benefited. Useful suggestions are needed not condemnation. Madam, thanks for introducing a new dimension to the dialogue.
Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device from MTN

-----Original Message-----
From: Bola Sotunsa <bolasotunsa@yahoo.com>
Sender: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Date: Tue, 3 Sep 2013 10:39:18
To: <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>; obi iheduru<ihed101@gmail.com>; <akwaaja@gmail.com>; IKHIDE<xokigbo@yahoo.com>
Reply-To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Musings on the Crucification of Unilag
 Journal Of Politics

Apologies to those who do not understand Yoruba or drum language.

 These drum texts comes to my mind in the wake of the recent condemnation of Unilag Journal  of Politics and the Nigerian Scholars who are home based:




O to d'igi buruku (2ce)        It can now be called a bad tree? (2ce)
Ogede to wo koko ye            the plantain tree which nursed the cocoa tree to
                    fruition
O to d'igi buruku            It can now be called a bad tree?


Tete opopo (2ce)            The indigenous spinach
O ti sanra                 It is fattened
K'ojo to ro si                before the rain watered it
Tete opopo                The indigenous spinach


Seleru agbo                It is the shallow spring of herbs
Agbara agbo                The flood of herbal concoction
L'Osun fi n we'mo re             That Osun bathes her children with
ki dokita o to de            Before the arrival of doctors



E f'alabelewe l'obe to yanju        Give the one who circumcises a suitable knife
E f'onisona l'ohun ti nse t'ona    Give the craftsman the tool of his trade
E ma f'or i ogongo we t'atioro o    Do not compare the ostrich's head with
                that of atioro
Oba eye ni nse                It is the king of birds


Ko ye aja (2ce)             It is not befitting for a dog (2ce)
B'o ye ni                 If it is befitting for one
gbigbo ko dubu ekun            barking does not kill a leopard
Ko y'aja                  It is not befitting for a dog


Ara re ni o pa (2ce)            It will kill itself (2ce)
Afopina t'o loun o pa fitila        The moth that says it will quench the lamp
Ara re ni opa                 It will kill itself


Eni to loun gbon                 He who claims to be wise
t'o tun l'eni kankan o gbon        and asserts no other one is wise
Oun ni baba...            He is the father of ...
.....







--------------------------------------------
On Tue, 9/3/13, okey iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com> wrote:

 Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Unilag Journal Of Politics: Call for Papers-Some Clarifications
 To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com, "obi iheduru" <ihed101@gmail.com>, akwaaja@gmail.com, "IKHIDE" <xokigbo@yahoo.com>
 Date: Tuesday, September 3, 2013, 6:12 AM

 From the reactions and responses from the editor
 and sympathizers of the Unilag Journal of Politics one can
 deduce one thing: THEY JUST DON'T GET IT A ALL, I'm
 afraid. First, Professor Ashiru continues to claim that
 "8)
 The
 journal is highly rated as this could be verified from the
 quality of papers
 published therein."  There can be no
 better confirmation for my earlier claim that most of the
 colleagues I encountered during my two-year stay in Nigeria
 had never heard of global standards or best-practices for
 judging the quality of academic or scholarly publications.
 Would Professor Ashiru please tell the world the citation
 counts of any article published in this "highly
 rated" journal? Where does each of his contributors
 rank among the most important contributors to knowledge
 development in Political Science in Nigeria, Africa and
 globally? Who are his reviewers, and what are their
 institutional affiliations and scholarly profile? Can he
 tell us how many citation counts of any article published in
 this "highly rated" journal that he can find in
 Google Scholar--which also lists scholarly work published by
 Nigerian scholars IN NIGERIA? Are there ways of
 remedying the situation? Absolutely, but it requires
 thinking outside the dangerous box that is the prevailing
 academic culture of dance of deceit in Nigeria.


 Strategy One: Stop
 wasting scarce resources on "Departmental
 Journals" which are considered third rate publication
 outlets anywhere in the world. I may be biased because I
 teach in a Tier I Research University, but I'd like to
 know how many people on this list outside Nigeria who can
 confirm that their departments publish departmental or field
 journals? How much weight is given to articles in such
 publications?


 Departmental (and university-based) Journals developed in
 Nigeria when we had one or two departments (of say,
 Political Science) in the entire country. Any such journal
 for most disciplines was likely to attract the best works
 and did indeed become hallowed outlets for serious
 scholarship. University of Ibadan, University of Nigeria and
 Ahmadu Bello University had a handful of those, most of had
 died by mid-1980s when the rot set in. We now have over 127
 universities plus over 100 Colleges of Education and
 Polytechnics, and nearly a dozen of centers and institutes
 that do one kind of Political Science research or the other.
 Sadly, none of these institutions or centers is talking to
 each other. Instead, they are busy churning out "highly
 rated" rag sheets that colleagues in the neighboring
 university down the road may never have heard of, let alone
 read. In Nigeria, once a "tradition" is
 instituted, even otherwise well-informed people will
 continue to perpetuate and defend it per omnia secula
 seculorum despite evidence that it's time to
 scrap it.


 Another example, an apposite digression, is the tradition of
 final year undergraduate projects/thesis. Every lecturer
 will tell you it is a useless exercise--most of the projects
 are plagiarized or written by lecturers; nobody has the time
 to read them but students get grades; parents fork out a lot
 of money for the projects; departments are running out of
 space for them; they are never indexed so that anybody can
 track subjects of interest; and more importantly, they
 create a huge environmental foot print, if you consider the
 number of trees that go into the wasted paper and the
 degradation that is caused by wasted ink. Yet every year,
 our universities go through this motion and nobody asks:
 Wait a minute, why are we doing this? Student projects or
 thesis were introduced at UNN when they had 200 students
 (founding class). Later, all universities copied this
 innovation in helping students develop critical thinking and
 writing skills--the hallmark of American liberal arts
 education--and it worked well, up to a point, perhaps in the
 mid-1980s. Now that you have over 38,000 students at UNN,
 should every one be required to write a thesis?


 Strategy Two: Revive the
 Nigerian Political Science Association and make it a truly
 national forum and/or outlet for serious scholarship. Get
 its moribund journal back on track and publish only quality
 work, blind, peer-reviewed without upfront fees. Especially,
 the book review section should be an avenue to disseminate
 and critique recent or on-going scholarship within and
 outside the country.


 The resort to Departmental journals is symptomatic of a
 national malaise driven largely by inferiority complex and
 inability to compete on a level
 playing field. We are retreating from national engagement to
 village and "autonomous community" micro-politics.
 And the Mercy-Industrial Complex is happy to goad us to this
 path to national perdition. How many departmental journals
 does Ford Foundation fund in the United States? Perhaps they
 have done so in the past, but I believe that seeking grants
 for a national-level journal will create a
 more credible platform for showcasing Nigerian scholarship.
 The sad truth is that foreign funding will ALWAYS run out,
 leaving the recipient poorer and devastated, while the
 Program Officers of the foreign aid agency will have beefed
 up their resume for the numerous projects they have
 shepherded in Africa. Just take a look at their glossy
 annual reports. The tragedy is that they have turned even
 our academics into hunters for this White Man's
 "egunje", and we like to huddle together in our
 micro-units to share it. The veteran socialist, Edwin
 Madunagu, defines a Nigerian NGO as an organization run by
 an educated man and his wife with access to a telephone and
 fax machine chopping the White man's money.


 Strategy Three: Once you
 have gone national, try online or e-journal option, as
 suggested by several contributors. Expand the membership of
 the Editorial and Advisory Board; it should not be a
 "Parapo" thing, please!  Additionally, try
 affiliating with reputable academic and scholarly journal
 publishers outside the country, like Taylor &
 Francis/Routledge, Wiley, Cambridge University Press, etc.
 None of these publishers will talk to you if you refuse to
 wean yourself off of the prevailing clannishness. They could
 care less about our desire to turn all our universities,
 including the older ones, into Bantustan or ethnic
 universities. POLITIKON, the journal of South
 African Political Science Association is published by Taylor
 & Francis, and it is just as African as it is, indeed,
 "highly rated.: Same story with Social and
 Economic Studies in the Caribbean.


 Strategy Four: Solicit technical
 and financial help or support, from the Nigeria/African
 Diaspora. Many people are willing to help, but they must
 have CREDIBLE PARTNERS in the home institutions. Why should
 I support Unilag Journal of Politics if by all its
 appearances (editorial & management team, reviewers,
 authors published, etc.) it smacks of an ethnic or clannish
 affair?


 Have you noticed how knowledge and cultural workers from
 some sections of the country nowadays routinely gather in
 their comfort zones and dish out "Best" this,
 "Best" that awards to their own? In fact, in one
 of the universities I visited on an NUC accreditation, we
 were alerted to the fact that a section of the country was
 awarding too many PhDs to themselves and that many of these
 half-baked doctorates are eventually forwarded as candidates
 during competition for Federal appointments requiring the
 PhD. So, what to do? Manufacture your own PhDs so that you
 don't miss out at the feeding trough. I wish these
 "turn-by-turn" charlatans will go back to the
 First Republic: To match the East one BA Hons. for one BA
 Hons., Awolowo and Ahmadu Bello established their own
 equally excellent universities to compete with the
 University of Nigeria. I digress again.


 I'm by no means claiming
 that I know all the answers or that any of my suggestions
 will work. Nonetheless, it's important to begin to think
 outside the box, my brothers and sisters. Our problems are
 largely self-inflicted; only we can retrace our steps back
 to reality.


 Regards,

 Okey Iheduru




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