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KATANGA (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   111895


Death of Dag Hammarskjold, the Congolese civil war, and decolonisation in Africa, 1960–65 / Rich, Paul B   Journal Article
Rich, Paul B Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   168210


Guerrilla warfare in Katanga: the Sanga rebellion of the 1890s and its suppression / Macola, Giacomo   Journal Article
Macola, Giacomo Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article discusses the origins and development of the Sanga insurgency of the 1890s with a view to demonstrating that, contrary to commonly held stereotypes, pre-colonial warfare was neither simple nor unchanging. Its tactics, it is argued here, repay the sort of close analysis commonly reserved for other typologies and theatres of war. The Yeke, against whose exploitative system of rule the Sanga and their allies rose up in 1891, survived the onslaught by entering into a strategic alliance with Lofoi, a newly established station of the Congo Free State, and its limited contingent of regular Force Publique troops. An in-depth examination of the joint Yeke-Force Publique counterinsurgency campaign leads to the conclusion that the novelty of the ‘small wars’ that accompanied the Scramble for Africa should not be overstated. In southern Katanga and, by implication, elsewhere, these confrontations were shaped by processes of mutual borrowing in which African military practices and even political aims were not necessarily subordinate to European ones.
Key Words Guerrilla  Katanga  Pre-Colonial  Scramble For Africa  Yeke  Sanga 
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3
ID:   179295


When decentralisation undermines representation: ethnic exclusion and state ownership in DR Congo's new provinces / Calderon, Alma Bezares; Jene, Lisa; Englebert, Pierre   Journal Article
Englebert, Pierre Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract African regimes commonly use strategies of balanced ethnic representation to build support. Decentralisation reforms, often promoted in order to improve political representation and state access, can undermine such strategies. In this article we use the example of the DR Congo to show the extent to which the multiplication of decentralised provinces is upending a political system largely based until now upon collective ethnic representation in the state. Not only are Congo's new provinces more ethnically homogeneous than their predecessors, but many of them have also witnessed political takeover and monopolisation by the province's dominant ethnic group. In addition, the increased number of Congolese who now find themselves non-autochthonous to their province of residence heightens their vulnerability and the potential for local conflict. Decentralisation, whose intent was proximity to governance, might well end up excluding more Congolese from the benefits of political representation. The article uses original empirical evidence on provincial ethnic distributions to support its claims.
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