African indigenous ecology control and sustainable community livelihood in southern African history

African indigenous ecology control and sustainable community livelihood in southern African history

Author: 
Masoga, Mogomme A.
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Date published: 
2014
Record type: 
Region: 
Responsibility: 
Kaya, Hassan O., jt. author
Journal Title: 
International Journal of African Renaissance Studies : Multi-Inter- and Transdiciplinarity
Source: 
International Journal of African Renaissance Studies , Vol. 9, No. 2, November 2014, pp. 6-19
Abstract: 

Based on sources for African Indigenous Ecology Control and Sustainable Community Livelihood in Southern African history this article argues that political independence in the Southern African region has altered the historiography of the region and the African continent as a whole. Black Africans are now looking to the past for inspiration to constitute the foundations of sustainable livelihoods using their own indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) and resources. The indicatives of the African Renaissance also demand that we draw on the significance of the control by pre-colonial African communities of their ecosystems. Existing testimonies show prosperity among pre-colonial African communities in the region. The argument is that, in order to restore the historical achievements of Africans in the region, IKS should form a constitutive part of education.

Language: 

CITATION: Masoga, Mogomme A.. African indigenous ecology control and sustainable community livelihood in southern African history . : Taylor & Francis , 2014. International Journal of African Renaissance Studies , Vol. 9, No. 2, November 2014, pp. 6-19 - Available at: https://library.au.int/african-indigenous-ecology-control-and-sustainable-community-livelihood-southern-african-history-7