Mougo Nyaggah
Dr. Mougo Nyaggah is a distinguished member of the education community, teaching and lecturing at a number of locations across California. Starting his career at University of California, Berkeley as a Teaching Associate, Dr. Mougo Nyaggah taught students Swahili and for numerous years, Dr. Mougo Nyaggah also lectured in Swahili at San Francisco City College, San Francisco. In addition to teaching Swahili, Dr. Mougo Nyaggah is a professor of History and Anthropology. He has held teaching positions at St. Mary's College of California, Moraga, the College of San Mateo, and at Holy Names University in Oakland, California. Ultimately, Dr. Mougo Nyaggah found his academic home at California State University, Fullerton. Dr. Mougo Nyaggah publishes widely and instructs students on an array of historical subjects. Dr. Nyaggah lectures on the 19th and 20th century histories of African civilizations, world societies in the 16th and 17th centuries, cultural anthropology, and the history of the United States. Dr. Mougo Nyaggah has published articles in numerous journals on the subject of race with articles and research findings on race, class, and educational marginalization of African Americans as well as educational standards that existed under South Africa’s apartheid laws. Other articles involving the apartheid laws include Dr. Nyaggah’s “Apartheid ‘Jim Crow’ Education in South Africa: Love it or Fight it” found in the Journal of Pan African Studies and his “South African Apartheid Laws and Black Revolt” article in the African Studies Journal (formerly African Studies Newsletter).