GLAC online seminar series AY26–27
Join the GLAC Online Seminar Series, bringing together researchers working on governance, labour, development, and social change in Africa.
All seminars start at 12:30h Brussels time and are held online. A link will be sent after registration. For more information, contact glac@uantwerpen.be.
29 September 2026 | VAT in the Real World in DRC
Speaker: Bienvenu Matungulu
This seminar examines the implementation of Value Added Tax in the Democratic Republic of Congo since its introduction in 2012. Drawing on administrative data, revenue statistics, and stakeholder interviews, the study highlights major gaps between VAT’s expected and actual performance. It shows that VAT revenues remain concentrated among a small number of firms, refund delays affect liquidity, and collusion between taxpayers and tax agents contributes to revenue losses. The paper questions assumptions about VAT’s neutrality and efficiency in contexts marked by weak institutions and corruption.
27 October 2026 | Protected and/or Coerced? Community Attitudes to Militarized Conservation in DR Congo
Speaker: Fergus Simpson
This paper examines how communities living around Garamba and Kahuzi-Biega National Parks perceive militarized conservation. It shows that armed eco-guards are viewed both as providers of security and as sources of coercion. Community attitudes vary according to people’s reliance on park resources and their exposure to armed-group violence. The study argues that militarized conservation generates a legitimacy trade-off: security benefits may strengthen support for conservation, while livelihood restrictions and enforcement-related grievances can undermine it.
24 November 2026 | Associational Power and Informal Social Protection in Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining in DRC
Speaker: Philippe Dunia Kabunga
This seminar explores how associational actors shape labour governance and informal social protection in artisanal and small-scale mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Based on comparative fieldwork in South Kivu, North Kivu, and Lualaba, the study examines miners’ associations, informal workers’ committees, friendship groups, and informal unions. It shows how these actors help miners confront social protection challenges, while also facing important organisational and political constraints. The paper contributes to debates on informal labour, decent work, moral economy, and bottom-up governance.
26 January 2027 | Floating Labour Market Dynamics: Labour Control and Agency in the Sand Supply Chain around Lake Kivu
Speaker: Joseph Mukulu
This paper investigates labour control and worker agency in the informal sand supply chain around Lake Kivu. Drawing on qualitative fieldwork in Idjwi and Bukavu, it examines how dockworkers navigate hiring, discipline, mobility, and daily insecurity. The study shows that job referrals and dual screening practices shape access to work, while lake-based living conditions increase workers’ vulnerability. At the same time, workers exercise agency through everyday forms of resistance, including sabotage. The paper also highlights gendered barriers, including the exclusionary effects of dormitory-style labour regimes and motherhood penalties.
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23 February | TBD
Speaker TBC
More information coming soon.
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30 March 2027 | TBC
Speaker TBC
More information coming soon.
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27 April 2027 | TBC
Speaker TBC
More information coming soon.
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25 May 2027 | Making Worlds with Data: Pluriversal Knowledge and Everyday Development in Kenya
Speaker: Berta Fernández Nuez
This seminar examines how people make and contest worlds through data in contexts shaped by long histories of development intervention. Drawing on multi-year ethnographic fieldwork in Kenya, the presentation follows how citizens, development practitioners, and civil society actors engage with data in everyday life. It shows that data is not only a technical tool, but also becomes entangled with memory, affect, creativity, aspiration, and lived experience. The paper highlights how data can generate multiple and sometimes competing understandings of development, community, and citizenship.
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