
The Journal of African Philosophy and Indigenous Knowledge is committed to the espousal of African philosophy and the knowledge-production context within which it grows. It covers the theoretical, policy, programmatic, and general dynamics of these African issues. Consequently, original and review articles in Philosophy, African Indigenous Knowledge, Anthropology, Archaeology, Geography, Political Science, Sociology, Psychology, History, Linguistics, Literature, education, Environmental Studies, African Studies, Arts, Economics, and related fields will be published in the journal.
This journal will be published four times per year, meaning that each issue will be published each quarter of the year. The journal will be committed to the best practices in academic journal publications. Hence, there will be a double-blind review of all the articles submitted to this journal. Furthermore, the journal will be abstracted and indexed in the most authoritative databases in the world, such as EBSCO, ProQuest, J-Gate, and Sabinet, and accredited by IBSS and Scopus.
ISSN Print: 3007-7184
Online: 3007-7192
Editor-in-Chief: Professor Victor Ojakorotu
Glotan Journals
Glotan research services
86 Eloff Street, Johannesburg, Gauteng
victor.ojakorotu@glotanjournals.com
Alternative Email: vojakoro@yahoo.com
Cell: +2778 3756718
Editor: Dr. Timothy Chibuike Anyanwu
Fellow, James Currey Society,
African Studies Center,
University of Oxford
chibyktimothy@gmail.com
anyanwu.timothy@funai.edu.ng
Current Issue
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2025): The Journal of African Philosophy and Indigenous Knowledge (JAPIK) Vol. 1, No 1, 2025
The Journal of African Philosophy and Indigenous Knowledge (JAPIK) is a quarterly collection of well-researched articles that seek to present the philosophical and indigenous dynamics of Africa to the world. Africa as the cradle of humanity lives in a contradictory world where little is known about its glorious past and the riches of its indigenous reality in the present. To this extent, there are fears that if nothing is done to introduce Africa to the modern world for what it possesses and can offer, it would be difficult to compete with other regions as the world is gravitating towards unprecedented levels of development.
The foregoing informs the establishment of the journal as an intellectual platform for discussing African philosophy and indigenous knowledge in a most needed nuanced manner. Given that African philosophers, thinkers and Indigenous knowledge custodians occupy the lower rungs of mainstream academic platforms, the journal intends to address this challenge through the publication of well-researched articles that bring African ontologies, epistemologies and methodologies to the fore. This helps in getting the needed recognition for African knowledge production in the world as the journal is committed to rigorous, multidisciplinary and inclusive discourse of issues on Africa and the African diaspora. As noted earlier, all articles featured in this issue of the Journal of African Philosophy and Indigenous Knowledge are well-processed, thereby ensuring their publication is in line with best practices. Therefore, we acknowledge the efforts of the editorial board, reviewers and authors for contributing their respective quota to the publication of this issue.
Published: 2025-02-21