Tapscott, Chris2022-12-052022-12-052021Tapscott, C. (2021). Overcoming the past and shaping the future: the quest for relevance in teaching and researching public administration in Africa. Global Public Policy and Governance, 1, 468–484. https://doi.org/10.1007/s43508-021-00030-x2730-6305https://doi.org/10.1007/s43508-021-00030-xhttp://hdl.handle.net/10566/8183The status of teaching and research on public administration in Africa countries, in many respects, remains a vestige of the colonial era and this is reflected in the epistemologies that underpin the design of the curricula and pedagogies adopted. They have been further shaped by the injunctions of neoliberalism and conditionalities of donor aid which promote normative northern models of public administration. Recognising this reality African scholars and others have, for some time, advocated for transformative models of policy formulation and governance which more accurately reflect African contexts. Commencing with an analysis of the historical factors that shaped state formation and administrative practices in post-colonial Africa, this article broadly examines how public policy and governance are taught and researched in African institutions.enAfrican colonial state legaciesConditionalities of neoliberal aidComparative public administrationHegemony of northern policy theoryContextual governanceOvercoming the past and shaping the future: The quest for relevance in teaching and researching public administration in AfricaArticle