Densua Mumford
Universitair Docent
- Naam
- Dr. D. Mumford
- Telefoon
- +31 70 800 9500
- d.mumford@luc.leidenuniv.nl

Densua Mumford is universitair docent internationale betrekkingen. In haar huidige onderzoek verkent ze het institutionele ontwerp van internationale organisaties in het mondiale zuiden en de belangen van buitenlands beleid van Afrikaanse staten.
Meer informatie op de Engelse site.
Universitair Docent
- Faculteit Governance and Global Affairs
- Leiden University College The Hague
- Mumford D., Sampson M.D. & Shires J. (2024), The promises and pitfalls of cryptocurrencies and blockchain for marginalized communities, Information, Communication and Society : 1-18.
- Mumford D. & Shires J. (2023), Toward a decolonial cybersecurity: interrogating the racial-epistemic hierarchies that constitute cybersecurity expertise, Security Studies 32(4-5): 622-652.
- Mumford D. (2023), Confronting coloniality in cyberspace: how to make the concept of (in)stability useful. In: Chesney R., Shires J. & Smeets M. (red.), Cyberspace and instability. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 299-329.
- Mumford D. & Shires J. (10 november 2023), Race and coloniality in cybersecurity. E-International relations. [blog].
- Mumford D. (2021), How regional norms shape regional organizations: the Pan-African rhetorical trap and the empowerment of the ECOWAS Parliament, African Affairs 120(478): 1-25.
- Mumford D. (2021), Building regional communities: the role of regional organisations in Africa. In: Futak-Campbell B. (red.), Globalizing regionalism and international relations. Bristol: Bristol University Press. 77-101.
- Mumford D. (2021), Data colonialism: compelling and useful, but whither epistemes?, Information, Communication and Society 25(10): 1511-1516.
- Mumford D. (3 oktober 2020), Comparative regionalism's decolonial turn: a proposition. E-International relations. [blog].
- Mumford Densua & Selck Torsten J. (2010), New Labour's Ethical Dimension: Statistical Trends in Tony Blair's Foreign Policy Speeches, The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 12(2): 295-312.