Kijakazi
JF-Expert Member
- Jun 26, 2007
- 7,093
- 10,469
Umesahau 'Senior lecturer' kabla ya associate professor.
Na pia, kwa UDSM, at least zamani (sina hakika kwa sasa) mtu kuwa full professor wala haikuhitaji PhD.
Kama unaweza, angalia prospectus za miaka ya 70, 80, na 90. Wamba dia Wamba hakuwa na PhD na alikuwa full professor!
Lakini tukizungumzia elimu tu, mtu mwenye PhD ana elimu kubwa kuliko full professor mwenye Master's.
Vile vile, wapo ma-PhD ambao hawana Master's. Yaani wana Bachelor's halafu wakaenda moja kwa moja kwenye PhD. Namjua mmoja alifanya hivyo lakini sitamtaja humu kwa sababu za privacy lakini mnaweza ku-guess na mkapatia....hahahahaaa
Wewe acha kupotosha hakuna kitu kama Hicho huwezi kuwa Profesa bila kuwa na PhD angalau kwa mfumo wetu wa TZ ambao nahisi tumaupata kutoka kwa Wazungu, na huyo Wamba d. Wamba alikuwa na PhD toka Marekani na pia alifundisha Marekani wasifu huo hapo Chini (nimetoa wiki)!
Wamba dia Wamba was born in Sundi-Lutete, Bas-Congo Province. He was raised in Swedish mission schools and grew into adulthood in the period when the prophetism of Simon Kimbangu and the political agitation for independence by the Association of the Bakongo People (ABAKO) was reaching its peak. When ABAKO split, he favored the faction of Daniel Kanza.
Upon graduation from secondary school, he was one of three students awarded scholarships by the African-American Institute to study in the United States. He went to Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, where Wamba wrote his honors dissertation on the philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Jean-Paul Sartre. He later went on to graduate studies at Claremont before teaching at Brandeis University, where he was associated with Peter F. Drucker. He went on to teach at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA.
During his period in the U.S., Wamba dia Wamba married an African-American woman and was involved in the Civil Rights Movement through the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Once the period of decolonization began in Africa, he joined the supporting committees of various US-based pan-Africanist liberation movements.
In 1980, he accepted a position as Professor of History at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. While visiting his parents' village in 1981, he was arrested by the government of Mobutu Sese-Seko for possessing a paper he had authored that was deemed 'subversive', and was detained for one year. He continued his role as a prominent figure in both academia and political circles in Africa. He is the former President of the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) as well as the founder and president of the Philosophy Club at the University of Dar es Salaam. He is an expert in the Palaver and other indigenous forms of African democracy. He participated in the Sovereign National Conference, held from 1990 through 1992 in Zaire. In 1997 he co-authored with Jacques Depelchin, the African Declaration Against Genocide.
In December 1997, Prof. Wamba was named a recipient of the Prince Claus Award for Culture and Development. The announcement of the award cited his "scholarly contribution to the development of African philosophy and for sparking off the philosophical debate on social and political themes in Africa." At this time he also worked closely with Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere to end the Burundi Civil War.