Kehinde Nkosi Andrews (born January 1983)[1] is a British academic and author specialising in Black studies. He was the first Black studies professor in the United Kingdom.
Early life and education
Andrews is of British African-Caribbean heritage.[2] He grew up in Birmingham, the son of a half-white English, half-Jamaican mother who was a university graduate and was born in Britain, and a Jamaican father who had come to the UK in his early teens.[3] Andrews earned a PhD in sociology and cultural studies from the University of Birmingham in 2011. His thesis was entitled Back to Black: Black Radicalism and the Supplementary School Movement.[4]
Academic career
Andrews is a professor of Black studies in the School of Social Sciences at Birmingham City University.[5] He is the director of the Centre for Critical Social Research, founder of the Harambee Organisation of Black Unity,[6] and co-chair of the UK Black Studies Association.[7] Andrews is the first Black Studies professor in the UK and led the establishment of the first Black Studies programme in Europe at Birmingham City University.[8][9][10]
Andrews narrated the 2018 film The Psychosis of Whiteness, which explores race and racism through cinematic representations of the slave trade.[27]
In July 2019, Andrews criticized the idea that prominent non-white members of the Conservative Party automatically represent racial progress, saying that a "cabinet packed with ministers with brown skin wearing Tory masks represents the opposition of racial progress".[28]
In September 2024, Andrews was investigated by police for using a racial slur against the Black political commenter Calvin Robinson.[32]
While critiquing books written by academics as a "con", Andrews said the work of many academics is "devastatingly bad" and stated one of his peers had written something so bad that "he writes like he has a brain injury".[33]
Selected works
Resisting Racism: Race, Inequality, and the Black Supplementary School Movement. London: Institute of Education Press. 2013. ISBN9781858565156. OCLC952965547.