
ISSN 2951-9853
DECOLONIZING BIOETHICS IN AFRICA
Confronting Epistemic Injustices
African Journal of Bioethics | eISSN: 3134-8742 | Diamond Open Access — No fees for authors
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AJB invites original submissions for a special issue advancing African ethical thought as a foundation for global bioethics.
Deadline: 31 July 2026 | Diamond Open Access
Submission deadline
31 July 2026
Languages accepted
English and French
Peer review period
August – September 2026
Article processing fee:
None — AJB is diamond open access
Expected publication
Late 2026 / Early 2027
Enquiries:
specialissue@africanjournalofbioethics.org
Submission platform
ScienceOpen (via AJB portal)
eISSN
3134-8742
Key Dates
About This Special Issue
The African Journal of Bioethics (AJB) invites original scholarly submissions for a special issue conceived as a deliberate intellectual intervention — advancing African ethical thought as a foundation for bioethics scholarship and practice, in ways that are both conceptually rigorous and grounded in lived realities.
Bioethics in Africa continues to operate within structures of knowledge production shaped predominantly by institutions and traditions of the Global North. These structures often marginalise African moral philosophies, indigenous knowledge systems, and locally grounded ethical frameworks. This special issue invites scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and communities to critically examine these dynamics and to advance contextually grounded, analytically rigorous ethical frameworks.
The issue aligns with AJB's founding mission: "to publish rigorous, interdisciplinary bioethics scholarship that speaks directly to African contexts and informs ethical policy and practice across the continent. This special issue aims to contribute to a body of scholarship that is analytically robust, contextually grounded, and generative of new directions for bioethics in Africa and beyond."
Submissions led by or meaningfully engaging African scholars and institutions are particularly encouraged
Aims and Scope
This special issue aims to:
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Both critically examine and advance understanding of epistemic justice and knowledge hierarchies in bioethics and global health research in Africa
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Centre African ethical traditions, lived experiences, and normative frameworks in bioethical analysis
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Advance decolonial approaches to research ethics, health systems governance, bioethics education, and emerging technologies
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Foster dialogue between scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and communities engaged in bioethics in Africa
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Produce scholarship that is intellectually rigorous, contextually grounded, and practically consequential for African health and research governance
This special issue aims to contribute to a body of scholarship that is analytically robust, contextually grounded, and generative of new directions for bioethics in Africa and beyond.
Indicative Themes
Submissions may address, but are not limited to, the following themes, organised across three domains:
1. Knowledge Systems and Epistemic Justice
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Epistemic justice and African knowledge systems - African moral philosophies, indigenous ethics, and community-based knowledge as foundational resources for bioethics, examined on their own terms and in relation to global frameworks.
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Decolonising bioethics education and capacity - Curriculum reform, pedagogical innovation, and capacity-building approaches that foreground African perspectives and ethical priorities.
2. Governance, Power, and Research Ethics
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Power, inequity, and global health research - Ethical analyses of funding structures, research partnerships, authorship practices, data ownership, benefit sharing, and extractive research dynamics.
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Decolonising research ethics and ethics review - Critical perspectives on IRBs, national ethics committees, community engagement, and context-sensitive ethical oversight.
3. Applied Domains
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Healthcare systems, priority setting, and resource allocation - Ethical challenges related to justice, equity, and decision-making within constrained health systems in African settings.
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Decolonising AI and digital health in Africa - Ethical implications of digital health tools, artificial intelligence, data governance, and digital infrastructures — including bias, exclusion, and digital colonialism.
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Ethics of global health emergencies - Ethical issues in epidemics, pandemics, and humanitarian crises, including emergency research, public health interventions, solidarity, and accountability.
Manuscript Type | Word Count |
|---|---|
Original empirical research | 6,000 – 8,000 words |
Conceptual and normative analyses | 4,000 – 7,000 words |
Policy and practice papers | 4,000 – 6,000 words |
Reviews (scoping, systematic, rapid) | 5,000 – 8,000 words |
Case studies | 3,000 – 5,000 words |
Commentaries and perspectives | 2,500 – 3,000 words |
Commentaries and perspectives are primarily editorially invited. Authors wishing to submit unsolicited commentaries should send a brief query (150 words maximum) to specialissue@africanjournalofbioethics.org before submitting.
Frequently asked questions
About African Journal of Bioethics (AJB)

ISSN 2951-9853
The African Journal of Bioethics (AJB) is a diamond open access journal publishing rigorous, interdisciplinary bioethics scholarship from and about Africa. Published by the Africa Bioethics Network (ABN) in partnership with Pluto Journals / ScienceOpen, AJB ensures maximum discoverability and accessibility for authors and readers worldwide.
eISSN: 3134-8742 | ajb@africanjournalofbioethics.org | africabioethicsnetwork.org