Eva Namusoke: Uganda, Cambridge and the Afterlives of Return

Key information

Date
Time
6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
Venue
SOAS University of London
Room
Senate Alumni Lecture Theatre (SALT), Paul Webley Wing

About this event

Following the return of objects and human remains from Cambridge University to Uganda, curator Eva Namusoke asks: what happens when artefacts return home?

Abstract

Despite the many public calls for restitution and repatriation, there have been relatively few permanent returns of African cultural heritage or ancestral remains from the UK. 

‘Afterlives of Return’ is a research project within the African Collections Futures project focused on the June 2024 return of 33 artefacts and the sacred remains of six people from the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Cambridge to the Uganda Museum, on a renewable three-year-loan. Despite this being a loan, the Ugandan government has made public that they are approaching this as a pathway to repatriation. While public discourse focuses on repatriation, this project is bringing together communities inside and outside academia and museums to ask: what happens after artefacts return home? 

In the earlier stages of the project, this talk will focus on the background to this return, its current context, and the larger questions it poses.

Speaker

Dr Eva Namusoke is Senior Curator, African Collections Futures, working across collections from and about the African continent in the University of Cambridge’s museums, garden, libraries, archives, and departments. Eva published a report on these collections in December 2024. She was the curator of Bound Together: Leather from Northern Nigeria (2025-2026) at The Fitzwilliam Museum. 

Eva’s history PhD from the University of Cambridge focused on the development of the Anglican church in Uganda post-independence. She obtained an MA in African Studies from Yale University. After her PhD, Eva worked on the Commonwealth Oral History Project at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICwS) in London, followed by roles in academia, public health, and policy research in Mauritius and Kampala.

Moderated by Teesa Bahana

Teesa Bahana is director of 32° East, a not-for-profit in Kampala that provides artists with the support, resources, and community they need to advance their craft, critically reflect our world, and imagine a new one. As director she has supported the development and execution of projects such as KLA ART Labs for research and critical thinking through public practice, KLA ART, Kampala's longest running public art festival, and residency exchanges with partners such as Arts Collaboratory, and Triangle Network. She has also led 32° East's capital project, to build the first purpose-built art centre in Kampala, phase one of which opened in March 2023. She has spent the last year on study leave pursuing an MA in Anthropology of Global Futures and Sustainability at SOAS University of London.

 

The event is a collaboration between the Art Africa Sessions research series and the Provenance, Accessibility, Repatriation and Restitution Working Group(PARR)

Image credit: Eva Namusoke