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JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES VOL: 52 NO 1 (7) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131794


African Union as a norm entrepreneur on military coups d'état i: an empirical assessment / Souaré, Issaka K   Journal Article
Souaré, Issaka K Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Between 1952 and 2012, there were a total of 88 successful military coups in Africa. Of those, 63 occurred prior to 1990, and 10 cases since the adoption, by the defunct Organization of African Unity (OAU), of the Lomé Declaration in July 2000, banning military coups and adopting sanctions against regimes born out of this. The article shows that the African Union (AU) has followed in the footsteps of the OAU in this regard. Assisted by some African regional organisations and international partners, the combined effect of this policy of the AU - assisted by other factors - has been a significant reduction in the occurrence of this phenomenon. While not constituting a funeral arrangement for military coups in the immediate future, these developments - if they were to continue - may indeed make this eventuality achievable in the long run. But the article also reveals some challenges the AU is facing in ensuring this.
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2
ID:   131791


Competing Muslim legacies along city/countryside dichotomies: another political history of Harar Town and its Oromo rural neighbours in Eastern Ethiopia / Osmond, Thomas   Journal Article
Osmond, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Between the Middle East and Eastern Africa, the city of Harar is often considered as the main historical centre of Islam in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa. Until recently, the cultural hegemony of the Muslim elites inhabiting Harar was commonly opposed to the almost pagan behaviours of the Oromo - or 'Galla' - farmers and cattle herders living in the wide rural vicinity of the town. The 1995 Constitution provided the different 'ethnolinguistic nationalities' of the new Ethiopian federation with the same institutional recognition. However, the institutionalisation of the two Harari and Oromo 'nationalities' seems to foster the historical duality between the city-dwellers and their close neighbours. This article proposes another political history of Harar and its ambivalent Oromo partners through the local dynamics of the Muslim city/countryside models. It reveals the both competing and complementary orders that have probably bound together the populations of Harar and its rural hinterland for more than five hundred years.
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3
ID:   131795


Gender perspectives on decentralisation and service users' part / Masanyiwa, Zacharia S; Niehof, Anke; Termeer, Catrien J.A.M   Journal Article
Niehof, Anke Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Increasing participation in decision-making processes by service users is one of the objectives of decentralisation reforms in Tanzania. The argument is that decentralisation enhances participation by all sections of the community, and by women in particular, and results in decisions that better reflect local needs. This paper examines the impact of decentralisation reforms on service users' participation for delivery of water and health services in rural Tanzania, using a gender perspective and principal-agent theory. The paper investigates how decentralisation has fostered spaces for participation and how men and women use these spaces, and identifies factors that constrain or encourage women's participation. It shows that decentralisation reforms have created spaces for service users' participation at the local level. Participation in these spaces, however, differs between men and women, and is influenced by the socio-cultural norms within the household and community. Men have gained more leverage than women to exercise their agency as principals. Women's participation is contributing to addressing practical gender needs, but strategic gender needs have been less adequately addressed because gendered power relations have been largely untouched by the reforms.
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4
ID:   131799


Rebel wars of Africa: from political contest to criminal violence? / Gberie, Lansana   Journal Article
Gberie, Lansana Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Ispenta grim afternoon in jalluary 2008 with josllua BI2h)1', 2 nmolious facuclnal lender during Liberia': civil war. Blah},-i, also knclwn as General Bun Naked, had a few days earlier rold his mumry's South Arman-sryle TnlLh and Rccondllauon Commission (may Lhal he killed 2o.non people during Libena'> civil wan. He had started as ii buy soldier lor rlie unired Liberaucln Movement of Liberia for Dcmclcr;1cy-_[ol1nscln faction (m.IM0}J, an erllmc millria group, and Ialer fomled rile nun Naked Brigade. 2\ band or mired eliild riglilers who believed Lhm nudily made meir b0dlt'> rrripemoue to bullets. Tm. faction iuughi iri llie verv dcsuuujvc battles of .V10nrcM'2 in April .995; claims um die group committed ritual cannibalism were widespread ar die rirrie
Key Words Warfare  Conflicts  Africa  Wars  Ethnic violence  Ethnic Wars 
Criminal Violence  Political Contest  Modern Africa  Rebel Wars  Strategy 
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5
ID:   131796


Representing foreign workers in the private security industry: South African perspective on trade union engagement / Gordon, Steven; Maharaj, Brij   Journal Article
Gordon, Steven Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In recent years South African cities have become home to a large number of undocumented migrant workers. If trade unions do not organise undocumented migrant workers, it opens up such workers to exploitation and maltreatment by employers, thereby creating a split labour market that undermines the entire labour movement. This article focuses on the responses of the national trade union movement in the private security sector to the presence of undocumented workers at the grassroots level. Using a case study approach, we find that the pressures of labour market informalisation in the industry prompt unions to seek to maintain and advance their position from their traditional support base of citizen workers rather than attempt to include new groups. The failure to engage is reinforced by anti-immigrant attitudes which link foreigners with problems in the industry such as low wages and portrays such workers as co-conspirators rather than comrades. While justice and solidarity have always been the foundation of trade unionism in South Africa, the movement is in danger of failing this test if the current situation in terms of the exclusion of undocumented foreign workers persists.
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6
ID:   131792


This pasture is ours since ancient times: an ethnographic analysis of the reduction in conflicts along the post-1991 Afar-Tigray regional boundary / Lenaerts, Lutgart; Breusers, Mark; Dondeyne, Stefaan; Bauer, Hans, Haile, Mitiku, Deckers, Jozef   Journal Article
Lenaerts, Lutgart Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The role of post-1991 ethnic-based federalism on conflicts along regional boundaries has been a topic of great dispute in Ethiopianist literature. This article sheds new light on the on-going debate based on original ethnographic material from the Afar-Tigray regional border zone. Contrary to other studies, conflicts appear to have reduced in that area. Two key questions are addressed: how do different groups lay future claims to land; and which role does the post-1991 government play in those claims to land and in reducing conflicts? The case study reveals that people materialise religion to lay future claims to land and that conflicts have reduced with increased involvement of the state over the past two decades, but that this reduction has come at a high cost and may therefore not be sustainable in the long term.
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7
ID:   131793


Ultranationalism, democracy and the law: insights from Côte d'Ivoire / Piccolino, Giulia   Journal Article
Piccolino, Giulia Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Although much has been written about the ideology of Laurent Gbagbo's Front Populaire Ivoirien in Côte d'Ivoire and its impact on the Ivorian politico-military crisis, little attention has been paid to the ubiquitous role of the law in the discourse and political strategy of the pro-Gbagbo elite. The Ivorian case may provide important insights about the connection between ultranationalist ideology and a legalist, formalist conception of democracy and national sovereignty. The article analyses the circumstances of the emergence of 'legalist nationalism' in Côte d'Ivoire by looking at key episodes of the Ivorian transition between 2002 and 2012. The article discusses the relevance of Pierre Englebert's concept of 'legal command' and the turbulences of democratic transitions in accounting for the prominence of legalism in Ivorian politics. It explores the implications of the Ivorian case for understanding the connection between law and politics in Africa.
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