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ID094927
Title ProperPeasants, power and ethnicity
Other Title Informationa bottom-up perspective on Rwanda's political transition
LanguageENG
AuthorIngelaere, Bert
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article analyses over 400 life trajectories of ordinary peasants in order to complement top-down studies of the Rwandan political transition. Changes and differences according to the ethnicity of the respondents shed light on the Hutu-Tutsi bi-polarity which underlies the transition and reveal a reversal in perceived ethnic dominance accompanying the decisive moment in the political transition: the overthrow of the Hutu-dominated regime by the Tutsi-led RPF. This suggests that the experience of the nature of governance and the (perceived) proximity to power lies at the heart of ethnic awareness. The nature of governance at the periphery of society is explored, and the article demonstrates that the instrumental stance on ethnic identity adopted by the post-genocide regime is not only erroneous but counter-productive. Adjusting the socio-political environment in which identities thrive is more important than a direct focus on identity constructs when developing policies to prevent ethnically structured violence.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Affairs Vol. 109, No. 435; Apr 2010:273-292
Journal SourceAfrican Affairs Vol. 109, No. 435; Apr 2010:273-292
Key WordsEthnicity ;  Power ;  Rwanda ;  Political Transition


 
 
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