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Diasporia News of Thursday, 18 April 2013

Source: castanet.net

GAAS makes UBC's Tettey a Fellow

Wisdom Tettey, Dean of the Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies at UBC's Okanagan campus, has been elected as a Fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences (GAAS), one of the highest honours for an academic from West Africa.

Tettey joined UBC in June 2011 from the University of Calgary, where, for two years, he was Interim Dean of the Faculty of Communication and Culture for two years and later appointed Associate Dean-designate for Interdisciplinarity in the Faculty of Arts.

He holds a bachelor's degree in Political Science and Russian, and a graduate diploma in Communication Studies from the University of Ghana. He also has a master's degree in Political Science from UBC, and a PhD in Political Science from Queen's University. Tettey has been a Killam Resident Fellow at the University of Calgary and a Visiting Research Fellow at the Ghana Centre for Democratic Development.

While he has lived in Canada for the past 23 years, Tettey retains strong ties with Ghana and is thrilled with this appointment.

“It is a great honour to be recognised by the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences, the premier institution of its kind in postcolonial Africa, and to be given the opportunity to join an esteemed group of compatriots,” he says. “Through this honour, the academy continues to acknowledge the accomplishments of members of the Ghanaian diaspora and the contributions that they are making to the intellectual life of the country and within the global academic community.”

Tettey's research covers a wide range of disciplines and his areas of expertise include mass media, political communication, and civic engagement in Africa; the African diaspora and transnational citizenship; information/communication technologies and the political economy of globalization; and international and intercultural communication.

He is a recognised international scholar with great accomplishments and he has a broad perspective and wealth of knowledge on many international matters, says UBC Okanagan's Provost and Vice-Principal Wesley Pue. Being awarded a fellowship into the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences is indeed an accomplishment to be applauded, he adds.

“UBC takes great pride in the honour bestowed upon Prof. Tettey. The Ghana Academy is that nation's counterpart to the British Royal Society or the Royal Society of Canada. Election to any of these bodies is a distinct and rare mark of excellence in scholarship.”

The Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences was established in 1959 and was officially opened by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. At that time, it was the first of its kind in Africa and had 20 fellows. The academy currently has a membership of 98 living fellows. Over the years it has become an internationally-renowned independent think tank that uses its platform to raise critical issues that affect all residents of Ghana.

Honorary secretary of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences Ralph Mills-Tettey says election into the fellowship is a lengthy process where a candidate must first be nominated and then undergo an extensive review of publications and teaching credentials.

“After the preliminary consideration by the academy and scaling that first hurdle, the candidate undergoes a process of peer review and assessment of his academic standing and publications,” says Mills-Tettey. “It is therefore a rare honour and recognition for Wisdom Tettey to be so elected.”

Tettey will be officially honoured and welcomed into the Academy's Fellowship during Founders Week, which takes place in Ghana in November.