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African Development Seminar: Governance and African Society
PIA 2574 African Development Seminar: Governance and African Society
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Our Foreign Aid Fix On Being Poor
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The Failure of the African State
State Crisis in Africa The Failure of the African State
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The Current Image?
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“Popular Hotel in Somalia Is Bombed by Militants”
Rescuers carrying a person wounded during an attack on Sunday at the Sahafi Hotel in Mogadishu, the Somali capital. New York Times, Nov. 2, 2015
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Sahafi Hotel, November 1, 2015
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The Ivory Coast Model: Triumph and Tragedy
Geography and Ethnicity North- Muslim, Mande; South: East, Akan, Christian; West, Kru, links with Liberia and Guinea The Ivory Coast Miracle The death of the Founding President: Felix Houphouet Boigny
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Tragedy in West Africa New York Times: The next “state collapse in Africa” Ivory Coast- Has it? Ghana’s North? Burkina Faso Sahel (Chad, Mali, Niger) University of Pittsburgh’s PDEV work. Assassination and tension in Dagbon The next Crisis can happen anywhere
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Ghana A Predictive Study- still has resonance
Martin Staniland, The Lions of Dagbon: Political Change in Northern Ghana (London: Cambridge University Press, 1975) Most African countries have outlier areas
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Social Reaction to Collapse: The Exit Strategy
Praetorian Government Recognize the empirical reality of dependency theory Black Markets and Smuggling Economic and Humanitarian Crisis
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Social Reaction: The Exit Strategy
Economy of Affection Impact of reform on education and health- decline and fall of rural area Absence of an effective private and non-profit sector: Failure of Civil Society
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Social Reaction: The Exit Strategy
Exit, Voice and Loyalty by Albert O. Hirschman (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1970)
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Albert O. Hirschaman, Born 1915
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Ethnicity, Class and Religion
Theories of Ethnicity: Review Primordialism Ethnicity and Religion cultural sub-nationalism Threat of Secession
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Zulu Clan- Early 20th Century
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Ethnicity, Class and Religion
Contextual- intensification of ethnic identity- and the reverse Ethnicity as Nationalism Ethnicity, Class and Society
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Somali Refugees
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Irrelevance of Ideology
African regimes regardless of ideology are state centric Skimmed public resources Extensive corruption Tenderariats and Crony Capitalism Labor movement strenghthening
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Irrelevance of Ideology
Patriarchal leadership Organizational elites Collapse of the social contract among the state centered middle class
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Meet the Sgwentu family
Meet the Sgwentu family. From left to right, they are Boy, Evelyn, Sipho, Nonswakazi, Teresa (my wife, or Auntie T as they call her), and Thania. They are a new breed of South African – THE MIDDLE CLASS BLACK SOUTH AFRICAN?. IS SOUTH AFRICA THE ANSWER?
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South Africa 2008- Mines, Anti-Immigrants and Trashing of Local Government (Marikana- 2012)
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Africa’s Reality Breakdown of Governance
Corruption Military Coups and Authoritarianism Self Serving Bureaucrats Bureaucratic Elites State Debt
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Above all the problem of the Zero-Sum Game
Above all the problem of the Zero-Sum Game. The Inability to Compromise Morgan Tsvangirai vs. Robert Mugabe
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Military Intervention: narrow, ethnic interests or military regimes, 1970s-1990s
Uganda: Obote, Amin and Museveni Zaire: Mobutu and “Big Manism” Somalia, Ethiopia: Totalitarianism and Anarchy Liberia and Sierra Leone: militarized ethnicity and Child Soldiers
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Uganda Letter A Personal Reality
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Uganda Letter Page 2
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The Viability of Colonial Borders
System collapse in central Africa, 1990-Present (Burundi, Rwanda, CAR) South Sudan Invading armies: Uganda, Rwanda, Namibia and Zimbabwe 5.4 Million Deaths in Congo. Africa’s World War
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Congo The military and minerals Tantalum
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Collapse of the African International System
Lack of interest of international community Civil War-Violence, Inter-state Conflict and African Development Libya- Only concern: The Oil?
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Abandonment of Africa by the international community?
Problem of “race” and racial sensitivity Perception of “primordial tribalism” in Africa- Violence and starvation since independence Donor fatigue: Debt and the End of the Cold War Foreigners as Invaders: “Tarzan [is still] an Expatriate?”
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International Community?
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The Failure of Institutional Development? How Real?
Problem of Inherited Institutions Mobilization- High, Institutionalization Low Failure of political institutions Military- failure to contain political demands What’s Next?
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The importance of political institutions
Rules and processes (formal and informal) are essential
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The Institutional State
Institutionalized Norms and Rules Diverse and Representative Civil Society Stable Government Structures Muted Cultural Differences
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Elinor Ostrom: Focus on Institutions and Processes
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Rules and Institutions
Balance between mobilization and political institutions Samuel P. Huntington
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The Institutional State
Decentralized (Devolved) Government Structures Effective Permanent Government (The Administrative Apparatus) Middle Class Social Compact Incorporate Traditional Governance
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Rules and Institutions
Adaptability rather than rigidity Complexity rather than simple Coherence rather than disunity Devolution and autonomy rather than subordinate state structures
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Democracy?
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Discussion: Is this important?
At Issue Primacy of democratic governance or “contained political structures” Discussion: Is this important?
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Traditional Elites: Still Important?
Inherited States failed to deal with Traditional Leadership Continuing Influence of Traditional Elites regardless of formal standing and regime type
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Zimbabwe Traditional Leaders
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Traditional Leadership in Tanzania
Tanzania Abolishes Chiefs in 1960s Study of Tanganyika Afrian National Party Elites (TANU- now Chama Cha Mapinduzi-CCM) Political Party Activists were traditional Elites (Norman Miller) Many activists and party elites are former traditional elites or relatives of chiefs and sub-chiefs
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Tanganyika Chiefs 1961
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Traditional Leadership in Tanzania
Informally the Party remained highly dependent upon traditional leaders on an informal basis Traditional political values still socialize people (both in urban and rural areas) Party informally accepts traditional roles as long as it give loyalty to the party
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How Chiefs Influence Governance
Continued influence and high status of those who hold “tribal” authority (Dyarchy) Presence in high political and administrative positions of those who are descendents or relatives of traditional leaders Status without official sanction but consists of party functionaries or bureaucrats
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Forms of Traditional Influence on Local Level Governance
Full Meetings (Town Hall Style) Consensus by Direct Democracy Pure Traditional Representation- Traditional Councils (Appointed) Partial- Councils which are half elected and half traditional
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Forms of Traditional Influence on Local Level Governance
Technical and Deconcentrated Boards. Department heads and Traditional Representatives Specialized through the Traditional judicial Function Triangular-2 traditional, 2 elected councilors and two appointed by central government (eg. Land Boards, eg. Botswana)
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GIS trainer Kent Burger with Tawana Land Board participants
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Forms of Traditional Influence on Local Level Governance
Bicameral- Traditional Elites represented in an Upper House Unicameral- Preserved Traditional Seats in Legislature Grassroots: Traditional Mechanisms of Governance at sub-district, area or village level
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Zambia House of Chiefs
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Discussion: How can the African crisis be addressed?
How do we assess the role of the media? Should CNN be banned in Africa? What argument do our authors make about the nature of the African crisis? Critique them What picture of Northern influence over African states does the reading give us?
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Discussion and Comments?
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