Pal Ahluwalia
#8,426
Most Influential Person Now
Vice Chancellor
Why Is Pal Ahluwalia Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Pal Ahluwalia is a Kenyan academic and the Vice-Chancellor of University of the South Pacific. Ahluwalia was born in Nairobi, Kenya, and educated at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada and Flinders University in Australia. He worked as a professor of politics at the University of Adelaide and then as Pro Vice-Chancellor and Acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the University of South Australia. In October 2014 he was appointed Pro Vice-Chancellor at the University of Portsmouth. In June 2018, Ahluwalia was appointed vice-chancellor of the University of the South Pacific.
Pal Ahluwalia's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Politics and Post-Colonial Theory: African Inflections (2001) (209)
- When Does a Settler Become a Native? Citizenship and Identity in a Settler Society (2001) (61)
- Out of Africa: post-structuralism's colonial roots (2005) (41)
- ‘Political Correctness’: Pauline Hanson and the Construction of Australian Identity (1998) (26)
- The year of voting dangerously (2017) (25)
- Australia's Ambivalent Re-imagining of Asia (2010) (20)
- Frantz Fanon and Steve Biko: Towards Liberation (2001) (18)
- The prosumer (2014) (18)
- Post-structuralism's colonial roots: Michel Foucault (2010) (18)
- Between black and white: rethinking coloured identity (2003) (18)
- MULTIPARTY DEMOCRACY IN TANZANIA (2001) (16)
- The Struggle for African Identity: Thabo Mbeki's African Renaissance (2002) (16)
- Negotiating Identity: Post-colonial Ethics and Transnational Adoption (2007) (16)
- Towards (Re)Conciliation: The Post-Colonial Economy of Giving (2000) (16)
- Fanon's Nausea: The Hegemony of the White Nation (2003) (15)
- Clash of civilisations — or Balderdash of scholars? (1994) (15)
- Afterlives of post-colonialism: reflections on theory post-9/11 (2007) (13)
- Reconciliation and pedagogy (2012) (11)
- AT HOME IN MOTION (2011) (9)
- We are here because you were there (2015) (9)
- Introduction: mainstreaming Africa (2003) (6)
- The Rohingya crisis: another failure of the international system (2018) (6)
- Origins and Displacement: Working Through Derrida's African Connections (2007) (6)
- Transforming Culture: Street Life in an Apartheid City (2002) (6)
- Empire or Imperialism: Implications for a 'New' politics of resistance (2004) (5)
- Specificities: The Rwandan Genocide: Exile and Nationalism Reconsidered (1997) (5)
- Specificities: Citizens and Subjects Citizenship, Subjectivity and the Crisis of Modernity (1999) (5)
- Suffering, memory and forgiveness: Derrida, Levinas and the pedagogical challenges of reconciliation in Cyprus (2012) (5)
- The Mali crisis (2013) (4)
- Brexit: the way of dealing with populism (2016) (3)
- Editorial Note: Journal of Tendency/Journal of Record (2005) (3)
- Why the humanities and social sciences are vital (2011) (3)
- Wikileaks looks up (2011) (3)
- The wonder of the African market: post-colonial inflections (2003) (3)
- Editorial Note: Interdisciplinarity (2007) (2)
- The vulgarization of politics: Ethnic violence in Kenya (2007) (2)
- Human Rights in Africa: A Post-Colonial Perspective (1998) (2)
- Founding father presidencies and their continuing legacies (2018) (2)
- Founding Fathers Presidencies and the Rise of Authoritarianism: Kenya: A Case Study (1996) (2)
- The Muslim imaginary (2011) (2)
- Can Uganda Ever Have Democratic Elections? (2016) (2)
- Greenwashing social identity (2014) (2)
- Negritude and Nativism: In Search of Identity (1999) (2)
- Precarious and model minorities: Sikh identities in the ‘new’ global politics of religion (2019) (2)
- Two Senses of the Post in Posthumanism (2016) (2)
- Aid, dependence, climate—a pacific dilemma (2021) (2)
- INVENTING HOME: (Re)Membering the nation (2006) (1)
- Populism—again, seemingly without end (2018) (1)
- Why did the World not learn lessons from South Ossetia and Abkhazia: Russia’s push into Ukraine? (2022) (1)
- The continuing importance of good governance (2020) (1)
- Donald Trump and Africa (2017) (1)
- Rethinking global cities (2016) (1)
- Editorial Note: Continuity and Change (2005) (1)
- THE POLITICS OF INTIMACY: (RE)THINKING 1984 (2010) (1)
- Editorial: human rights and football (2021) (1)
- Fear of free faculty? (2020) (1)
- Reconciliation and Pedagogy. Postcolonial Politics. (2012) (1)
- The subject of Sikh Studies (2005) (1)
- The cognitariat (2012) (1)
- On late style: Edward Said's humanism (2009) (1)
- A changing world: the future for Social Identities (2018) (1)
- ‘The politics of free speech’ (2012) (1)
- A new dawn for Cuba: the end of an era (2017) (0)
- Uganda: No-Party or One-Party State? (2000) (0)
- To count or not to count? (2015) (0)
- The 2016 Zambian Elections: Democracy on the Brink (2016) (0)
- Religion and violence (2015) (0)
- Editorial: Divided labor, multiplied culture (2009) (0)
- Editorial: The great fault-line of politics (2017) (0)
- The Covid conjuncture (2020) (0)
- Burundi: We Cannot Allow Another Genocide (2016) (0)
- The great fault-line of politics (2017) (0)
- Twenty years of African Identities (2022) (0)
- Voting for Identity (2022) (0)
- Editorial: The Muslim imaginary (2011) (0)
- Will the 2017 Kenyan Elections Challenge Orthodoxy? (2017) (0)
- Uganda elections: Museveni’s success at what cost? (2021) (0)
- State and economy (2021) (0)
- Celebrity activism (2022) (0)
- Editorial: The new freedoms (2013) (0)
- Journalism today – beacon or dross? (2019) (0)
- Editorial Note: The Makeover (2007) (0)
- Editorial: Election reflections (2009) (0)
- The paradox of Kenyan politics (2013) (0)
- Race (2006) (0)
- Cultural change, knowledge change (2011) (0)
- Delivering Freedom: Australia’s Witnessing of Abu Ghraib (2006) (0)
- Note Pal Ahluwalia and Abebe Zegeye (2005) (0)
- The quandary of the popular (2011) (0)
- Neoliberalism and the manufacture of truth (2021) (0)
- Hyper-masculinity and the newer media (2019) (0)
- Negating freedom's freedom (2010) (0)
- The saga of the 2017 Kenyan elections: can they really be free and fair? (2017) (0)
- Editorial (2008) (0)
- Tanzania: Where to Next? (2015) (0)
- Reflections on genocide in Africa (2013) (0)
- Mandela's Legacy (2013) (0)
- Editorial (2014) (0)
- EDITORIAL (2009) (0)
- Why do wars happen? (2016) (0)
- Reflections on the Rwandan genocide (2015) (0)
- Election reflections (2009) (0)
- Divided labor, multiplied culture (2009) (0)
- The new freedoms (2013) (0)
- Development and social identities (2012) (0)
- Editorial: We are here because you were there (2015) (0)
- Making up humans (2022) (0)
- Preface to Nihilism (2016) (0)
- Editorial Note—Crisis in Culture (2006) (0)
- Why journalism? (2022) (0)
- Editorial: The cognitariat (2012) (0)
- The Sikh faith and its encounter with the humanities within the contemporary secular university* (2018) (0)
- Editorial: To count or not to count? (2015) (0)
- Specular and syncretic border intellectuals: Ali Mazrui and Cherry Getzel (2015) (0)
- Kenyan elections 2022: beacon for democratic processes? (2022) (0)
- Is social democracy on the run? (2017) (0)
- Two forms of violence and the tech behemoths (2022) (0)
- Notes on Contributors (2005) (0)
- Semiosis and the supposed superiority of ‘man’ (2020) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Pal Ahluwalia?
Pal Ahluwalia is affiliated with the following schools: