Botswana has been portrayed as a major case of exception in Africa-as an oasis of peace and harmony with an enduring parliamentary democracy, blessed with remarkable diamond-driven economic growth. Whereas the "failure" of other states on the continent is often attributed to the prevalence of indigenous political ideas and structures, the author argues that Botswana's apparent success is not the result of Western ideas and practices of government having replaced indigenous ideas and structures. Rather, the postcolonial state of Botswana is best understood as a unique, complex formation, one…mehr
Botswana has been portrayed as a major case of exception in Africa-as an oasis of peace and harmony with an enduring parliamentary democracy, blessed with remarkable diamond-driven economic growth. Whereas the "failure" of other states on the continent is often attributed to the prevalence of indigenous political ideas and structures, the author argues that Botswana's apparent success is not the result of Western ideas and practices of government having replaced indigenous ideas and structures. Rather, the postcolonial state of Botswana is best understood as a unique, complex formation, one that arose dialectically through the meeting of European ideas and practices with the symbolism and hierarchies of authority, rooted in the cosmologies of indigenous polities, and both have become integral to the formation of a strong state with a stable government. Yet there are destabilizing potentialities in progress due to emerging class conflict between all the poor sections of the population and the privileged modern elites born of the expansion of a beef and diamond-driven political economy, in addition to conflicts between dominant Tswana and vast other ethnic groups. These transformations of the modern state are viewed from the long-term perspectives of precolonial and colonial genealogies and the rise of structures of domination, propelled by changing global forces.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ørnulf Gulbrandsen is Professor of Social Anthropology and has been the Head of the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen for many years. He has conducted fieldwork in Norway, Botswana and, recently, in Sardinia. He has published extensively in books and international journals, especially on politics/state formation, law/jurisprudence, cosmology/occult practices, evangelizing Christianity, space, industrial relations/trade unions, political economy/labour migration, cultural ecology/land tenure, and kinship/marriage.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations Foreword by Bruce Kapferer Preface Introduction Chapter 1.The Development of Tswana Merafe and the Arrival of Christianity and Colonialism Chapter 2. Tswana Consolidation within the Colonial State: Development of a Postcolonial State Embryo Chapter 3. Cattle, Diamonds and the Grand Coalition Chapter 4. State Capture of Indigenous Authority Structures: Ambiguities of Confrontation and Cooperation Chapter 5. Tswana Domination, Minority Protests and the Discourse of Development Chapter 6. Anti-Politics and Questions of Democracy and Domination Chapter 7. Governmentalization of the State: On State Interventions in the Population Chapter 8. Escalating Inequality: Popular Reactions to Political Leaders Conclusion Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations Foreword by Bruce Kapferer Preface Introduction Chapter 1.The Development of Tswana Merafe and the Arrival of Christianity and Colonialism Chapter 2. Tswana Consolidation within the Colonial State: Development of a Postcolonial State Embryo Chapter 3. Cattle, Diamonds and the Grand Coalition Chapter 4. State Capture of Indigenous Authority Structures: Ambiguities of Confrontation and Cooperation Chapter 5. Tswana Domination, Minority Protests and the Discourse of Development Chapter 6. Anti-Politics and Questions of Democracy and Domination Chapter 7. Governmentalization of the State: On State Interventions in the Population Chapter 8. Escalating Inequality: Popular Reactions to Political Leaders Conclusion Bibliography Index
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