About Archie MafejeProfessor Monwabisi Archbald Mafeje was born on 28 March 1936 in Engcobo in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. He grew up in an academic setting – his father was headmaster of the local primary school and his mother was a teacher. Sent to Healdtown (an illustrious school whose former pupils included South African State President Nelson Mandela and founder of the Pan African Congress Robert Sobukwe) Mafeje was influenced by History teacher (and activist, journalist and writer) Livingstone Mogotsi. After![]() In 1973, at the age of 34, he was appointed professor of anthropology and sociology of development at the Institute of Social Studies in The Hague by an Act of Parliament and with the approval of all the Dutch universities, becoming the first African scholar to be so distinguished in The Netherlands. His name appears in the prestigious blue pages of the Dutch National Directorate. During the long years of his exile from South Africa, the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) became Mafeje’s home where he contributed in no small measure to charting an Afrocentric approach to the study of African issues. But he also had an enormous impact outside of Africa where he had many experiences as visiting researcher, fellow or professor at Cambridge University, at the University of Copenhagen, at the Nordic Africa Institute in Uppsala, at Umeå University in Sweden and at NorthWestern University in Chicago. His most productive years were during the 1980s and 1990s, publishing widely on a diverse range of topics. He wrote a path-finding article, ‘The Ideology of Tribalism’, and also book chapters entitled The Land Question and Agrarian Revolution in Buganda', 'Religion, Class', and ' Neo-Colonialism, State Capitalism or Revolution'. Archie during his academic years Mafeje entered numerous debates challenging the concept of a dual economy, on the nature of the agrarian and land questions in Africa, and on the significance of the Soweto uprising in South Africa. Archie Mafeje described himself as being South African by birth, Dutch by citizenship, and Egyptian by domicile.
Professor Archie Mafeje, died in Pretoria, South Africa two days before his 71st birthday on 28 March 2007. In his tribute to Mafeje, Professor Fred Hendricks from Rhodes University stated that, "He was a respected scholar and deeply committed to the pan-Africanist cause of political, economic and cultural emancipation." Adebayo Olukoshi, Executive Secretary of CODESRIA , declared Mafeje as, "A great pan-African, an outstanding scientist, a first rate debater, a frontline partisan in the struggle for social justice, and a gentleman of great humanitarian principles." Archie Mafeje will be remembered for being opinion minded, intelligent and focused and for being a scholar who did not fear to raise matters that are challenging within the social scene. |
Archie Mafeje Research Institute


In 2000 Mafeje finally returned to his homeland, South Africa where he was appointed a research fellow by the National Research Foundation (NRF) working at the African Renaissance Centre at the University of South Africa. Although he was involved with the CODESRIA throughout his lifetime, it was only upon his return to South Africa that he became a member of the scientific committee of the council, and in 2003 was awarded honorary life membership. In 2005, in respect of his outstanding contributions, he was appointed a CODESRIA Distinguished Fellow.