Unser Team

Das Institut geht aus der über hundertjährigen wissenschaftlichen Beschäftigung mit Afrika in Leipzig hervor und ist geprägt von Multidisziplinarität. Wir schöpfen aus Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, Sprachsoziologie und -philosophie, Politikwissenschaft, Ethnologie und Entwicklungssoziologie.

Institutsleitung

Prof. Dr. Dmitri van den Bersselaar

Institutsleitung

Geschichte Afrikas
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2.208
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37035
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Claudia Günther

Institutssekretärin

Institut für Afrikastudien
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2204
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37030
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Nach Vereinbarung per E-Mail

Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter

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Dr. Elhadji Ari Awagana

Afrikanistik
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2202
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37034
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Prof. Dr. Dmitri van den Bersselaar

Prof. Dr. Dmitri van den Bersselaar

Geschichte Afrikas
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2.208
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37035
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Mittwochs 09 – 11 Uhr.

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Ojo Blank

Afrikanistik
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

Dr. Irene Brunotti

Dr. Irene Brunotti

Afrikanistik
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2203
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37033
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Montag 13 – 15 Uhr oder nach Vereinbarung per E-Mail.

Prof. Dr. Ulf Engel

Prof. Dr. Ulf Engel

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2209
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37038
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Nach Vereinbarung.

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Dr. Jens Herpolsheimer

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

Dr. Enrico Ille

Dr. Enrico Ille

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2207
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37032
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Nach Vereinbarung.

Ph.D. Lara-Stephanie Krause-Alzaidi

Ph.D. Lara-Stephanie Krause-Alzaidi

Afrikanistik
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2.206
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37028
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Montags 13 – 15 Uhr und nach Vereinbarung.

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Afua Agyeiwaa Lamptey

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

Ph.D. Mariusz Lukasiewicz

Ph.D. Mariusz Lukasiewicz

Geschichte Afrikas
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2207
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37032
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Dienstags 9 – 11 Uhr.

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Dr. Rachel Muchira

Afrikanistik
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

Sprechzeiten
Mittwochs 13 – 15 Uhr.

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Stuart Sandile Mbanyele

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

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Rim Taraoui

Institut für Afrikastudien
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15
04107 Leipzig

Prof. Dr. Katja Werthmann-Kirscht

Prof. Dr. Katja Werthmann-Kirscht

Gesellschaft, Politik und Wirtschaft in Afrika
Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum
Beethovenstraße 15, Raum 2210
04107 Leipzig

Telefon: +49 341 97 - 37037
Telefax: +49 341 97 - 37048

Sprechzeiten
Sprechstunde in der vorlesungsfreien Zeit
nach Vereinbarung per E-Mail.

Weitere Mitglieder

Prof. Dr. Edlyne Anugwom

  • visiting professor
  • ongoing project: Informality, Vulnerability and Precarity as Social Conditions of Existence in the Neoliberal Age: Evidence from the North and South.

    The study investigates precarity and informality as realities of social existence of citizens in the global North and South. While labour precarity may exist as a reality of employment/engagement in the informal sector, it is also reminiscent of larger conditions of existence which includes not only the employed but their dependents and significant others. In effect, the study interrogates the orthodox economic narratives of precarity as solely related to the realities of the typical workplace. Though the discourse of precarity has been dominated by emphasis on labour, I intend here to investigate precarity from a largely social perspective with emphasis on informal sector workers and the impact of informality on the social conditions of their families and relations. But while there may be different drivers of informality in different global contexts, the process may embody precarity and thus call attention to the need to empirically identify these drivers and the related experiences of precarity as definitive of social conditions of a good number of citizens. Therefore, equally undergirding this study is the goal to unravel the extent to which the notion of social precarity can be privileged to capture both the labour conditions in the informal sector and the larger determining influence of neoliberalism on the broader conditions of existence of members of the society.

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PD Dr. Geert Castryck

Contact via email: geert.castryck[at]uni-leipzig.de

Geert Castryck is a historian with special interests in spatial and postcolonial approaches to history, memory and identity, and the production and transfer of knowledge. Spatially, he has focused primarily on East and Central Africa, on transregional entanglements in the Indian Ocean world and between Africa and Europe, and on urban areas. Thematically, he has worked on questions of imperialism and colonization, colonial legacies and decolonization, Islam and Swahili urban identity, and peace and remembrance education. 

He is currently a private lecturer at the Faculty of History, Arts and Area Studies at Leipzig University. He has been affiliated with Ghent University (1999-2006, 2015-2016, and 2025), the Flemish Peace Institute in Brussels (2006-2010), Leipzig University (since 2010), and the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (2023-2025), complemented by research stays at the Universities of Edinburgh and Oxford (2022), and teaching assignments at the Université Nationale du Burundi, Bujumbura (2012), and the University of Addis Abeba, Ethiopia (2016-2018). 

He received the degree of Doctor of History from Ghent University (2006) and his Habilitation, with venia legendi for the history of the 19th to 21st centuries, from Leipzig University (2022). Furthermore, he holds a master’s degree in Oriental Studies (Islam/Arabic and Judaism/Hebrew), a history teacher degree, and the Saxon Higher Education Didactics Certificate.

Ongoing research projects include an entangled history of colonialism, decolonization and globalization, a spatial reading of colonialism and imperialism in Africa and Europe, an exploration of urban citizenship, and a postcolonial history of peace.

ORCID iD