This article presents a systematic analysis of the historical development, institutional transformations, and contemporary challenges of book publishing across the African continent. The study adopts a broad chronological perspective, ranging from early manuscript traditions in regions such as Timbuktu and North Africa to colonial-era printing activities, missionary publishing practices, post-independence national publishing policies, and recent processes of digital transformation within the context of globalization. The analysis demonstrates that the African publishing sector is shaped by key structural factors, including linguistic diversity, limited readership capacity, copyright regulation, distribution infrastructure, and varying levels of state support. These factors collectively influence both the constraints and the developmental potential of publishing systems across the continent. The findings indicate that digital technologies, international cooperation, and expanding access to knowledge create new opportunities for the sustainable development of African publishing. The integration of traditional publishing practices with contemporary technological systems is identified as a central pathway for strengthening the position of African publishing within the global knowledge economy.
Khalafova et al. (Sat,) studied this question.