Reclaiming Edward Blyden’s Vision of African Centered Leadership: A Pan African Reassessment of Contemporary Governance

Maganya H. Innocent *

Tangaza University, Kenya.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

The evolution of African political thought has been significantly shaped by intellectuals and revolutionaries advocating for liberation, unity, and self-determination. Edward Wilmot Blyden (1832–1912), a seminal Pan-African thinker, emphasized African agency, cultural authenticity, and civilizational dignity. His call for decolonizing the African mind and resisting Eurocentric paradigms remains deeply relevant. This paper employs qualitative textual analysis of Blyden’s writings alongside contemporary political discourse to examine the philosophical and strategic disconnect between foundational Pan-African ideals and present-day African governance. Drawing from Pan-African historiography, postcolonial theory, and current political critiques, the study identifies enduring patterns of neo-colonialism, leadership failure, and institutional fragility. The results reveal that while Blyden’s principles offer a coherent vision for culturally grounded and autonomous governance, these ideals are largely unfulfilled in current leadership structures. The study concludes that a revitalization of Blyden’s intellectual legacy—particularly his emphasis on ethical leadership, indigenous knowledge systems, and cultural sovereignty—could serve as a transformative paradigm for reconstructing African governance in the 21st century.

Keywords: Edward Blyden, African leadership, Pan-Africanism, decolonization, governance, political philosophy


How to Cite

Innocent, Maganya H. 2025. “Reclaiming Edward Blyden’s Vision of African Centered Leadership: A Pan African Reassessment of Contemporary Governance”. Asian Research Journal of Arts & Social Sciences 23 (7):12-21. https://doi.org/10.9734/arjass/2025/v23i7722.

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