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Showing papers in "African Studies Review in 1989"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Malloch-Brown argues that experts will never again have the effrontery to sit down together to discuss refugees without refugees being present, but I doubt it.
Abstract: …What excites me…is the presence of refugees amongst us who have arrived here straight from refugee camps. It strikes me as quite extraordinary that we should be hailing this as such an innovation. But innovation it is. I would hope that experts will never again have the effrontery to sit down together to discuss refugees without refugees being present, but I doubt it. Refugee work remains, perhaps, the last bastion of the ultra-paternalistic approach to aid and development. It is hard to think of another area where the blinkered nonsense of the “we know what's best for them” approach survives so unchallenged. Mark Malloch-Brown, as quoted in Harrell-Bond and Karadawi (1984) I believe that if you want political action, you must get governments together. Their deliberations will be the springboard for action. In my opinion, it is quite unrealistic to expect them to meet together with individual refugees (or groups representing refugees) and NGOs [non-governmental organizations]. Where the adoption of recommendations for political action is concerned, it does not work like that. Eagles don't consort with sparrows. It's a law of nature. Anon. …Thanks for your copy of the [above] letter. Eagles: birds of prey, prone to wander alone, high above the world of everyday events, remote, lofty and unadapted to human civilisation. Sparrows: friendly, sunny, engaged birds, spending time in social intercourse, feet on the ground, contributing to variety of life and human happiness. Of the three “durable” solutions to refugee situations—voluntary repatriation, integration, and resettlement—the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) proclaims voluntary repatriation to be the most desirable.

117 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the history of black history as a research field in the 19th-century economic and social systems, focusing on the differences between the main competing schools, rather than their similarities.
Abstract: In this paper, I am less interested in the differences between the main competing schools, than in their similarities. The differences were often artificially emphasized at the expense of basic common assumptions. All approaches we have used in African studies are deeply rooted in 19th-century epistemology since the neo-Marxist epistemological break never materialized (Jewsiewicki, 1987). Notwithstanding the fundamental importance of Marxist approaches to the transformation of academic knowledge about societies in Africa, there was no intellectual revolution. The modern world system approach that belongs to the radical paradigm partially accounts for this failure. As knowledge is socially produced and strongly related to the power relationships, one cannot expect a radical epistemological break to occur in a society that is a historical product of 19th-century economic and social systems. In radical paradigm terms, how can one expect a capitalist mode of production to produce an epistemology and a theory that would be a “Copernican revolution” (Sahli quoted in Jewsiewicki, 1986: 5) in knowledge? As Martha Gephart (1986: iii) stated recently, “An overview paper is a fortuitous marriage of an important topic and… individual.” Such is the case of this paper initially commissioned as an evaluation of Marxist African studies. The final result mediates my personal history as an African scholar and my perception of the growing difficulties of African studies with ‘Africa,’ their invented object. (Mudimbe, 1988) In many respects the ambitions of this paper are similar to the goals of Meier and Rudwick (1986: xi): We grew less interested in analyzing specific works than in understanding the interrelations between the trajectory of a scholarly specialty and developments in the changing social milieu and in the profession at large . … Thus, this volume is not a standard historiography, but an examination of several topics that illuminate the rise and the transformation of black history as a research field.

84 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a recent survey of 343 factories in over 16 African countries, spanning sectors as diverse as beverages, textiles, pulp and paper, flour milling, sugar refining and cement, fully 23 percent of the companies were found to have ceased production by mid-1980 and a further 57 percent were functioning at less than 70 percent of nominal capacity as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: A quarter of a century after independence, few would dispute that African industry is in crisis. In a recent survey of 343 factories in over 16 African countries, spanning sectors as diverse as beverages, textiles, pulp and paper, flour milling, sugar refining and cement, fully 23 percent of the companies were found to have ceased production by mid-1980 and a further 57 percent were functioning at less than 70 percent of nominal capacity—well below their break-even point (Inst. de l'Entreprise, 1985: 16). No African country has been spared, including those that, like the Ivory Coast, had been regarded as economic miracles in the first two post-independence decades. From both the left and the right have thus come serious questions about the net contribution that industry has made to development in sub-Saharan Africa. The architects of Africa's industrialization process—multinational firms, states and foreign aid agencies— have also come under attack. But if the critiques have been rich, they have generated surprisingly little new data and few innovative prescriptions. Policy initiatives thus flow mainly from a single source, the international lending community, and within it, from the IMF and the World Bank, which have become its guiding spirits. Two features are common to their proposals (Bernstein, 1986; Loxley, 1984; Marsden and Belot, 1987; World Bank, 1981, 1984, 1987). One is an implicit movement away from industry and towards agriculture through the implementation of policies to liberalize tariffs, reduce the role of the state, “get prices right,” and encourage exports. The other is an explicit move towards the rehabilitation of African industry within existing structures, thus tacitly accepting the particular paradigm that has given to African industry its current form and fragility.

83 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The field of sub-Saharan art has achieved only a marginal status in the disciplines of art history and anthropology as mentioned in this paper, and the problems of these relationships, the types of changing scholarly activities, and options for the future are discussed.
Abstract: This overview assesses the study of sub-Saharan art by art historians in the United States, as a complement to the earlier examination by Paula Ben-Amos (1987) of African art studies from an anthropological perspective. Academic status for African art history, focused on sub-Saharan Africa, began in the 1950s, when a small group of scholars assigned style categories and broad social functions to works of West and Central African sculpture. With the expansion and development of the field, linked to the use of anthropological methods, the emphasis in research has shifted towards adopting multiple perspectives of analysis and seeking African categories in relation to varied artistic production. Nevertheless, study of sub-Saharan art has achieved only a marginal status in the disciplines of art history and anthropology. This essay examines the problems of these relationships, the types of changing scholarly activities that have characterized the field of sub-Saharan art, and considers options for the future.

62 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study of African art began in the first decade of this century as mentioned in this paper and the main models that have been utilized in social research on African art and with tracing their impact on the development of art studies.
Abstract: The study of African art began in the first decade of this century. In looking back over more than 70 years of research, it is possible to discern a distinctive set of social science concerns, priorities, and modes of analysis. This social perspective depends not so much on disciplinary affiliation as on the kinds of stands taken on the nature of art and on the relative importance of culture as an explanatory principle in understanding its meaning. This paper is concerned with articulating the main models that have been utilized in social research on African art and with tracing their impact on the development of art studies. This historical account will also point out some of the most serious limitations of these models and will suggest studies which may lead to promising new directions. The focus of this review, then, will be on tracing the development of conceptual models with a social perspective. Studies with a social perspective include those which deal with the relationships among art, society and culture. These relationships can be conceived in a number of different ways, including, as Baxandall (1985: 89) succinctly suggests, “causality or significance or analogy or participation.” Such relationships are always a two-way street: not only do social practices and beliefs illuminate and affect art, but art also illuminates and affects social practice. Two essays will clarify the specific nature of the social perspective. Both classics in the field, both dealing with aesthetics, they are: “Yoruba Artistic Criticism” by Robert Farris Thompson (1973b) and “Principles of Opposition and Vitality in Fang Aesthetics” by James W. Fernandez (1966).

41 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The consequences of the division of the world into competing blocks and an arms traffic which knows no borders are to be seen in the festering wound which typifies and reveals the imbalances and conflicts of the modern world: the millions of refugees whom war, natural calamities, persecution and discrimination of every kind have deprived of home, employment, family and homeland.
Abstract: I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Elie Wiesel (1986) The consequences of this state of affairs [the division of the world into competing blocks and an arms traffic which knows no borders] are to be seen in the festering of a wound which typifies and reveals the imbalances and conflicts of the modern world: the millions of refugees whom war, natural calamities, persecution and discrimination of every kind have deprived of home, employment, family and homeland. Pope John Paul II (1987: para. 24) Africa is sometimes called “a continent on the move.” But this is not a recent phenomenon. Africans have always been “on the move,” long before any regular contact with Europe. In a vast and sparsely populated continent, people and communities relocated to maintain ecological balance, to seek a more secure environment and to achieve better conditions of living. Almost every region of Africa at one time or another has been affected by various streams of population distribution and redistribution. It is neither possible nor important to define these movements precisely or to delineate their frontiers exactly (for an overview based on archeological and linguistic studies see Devise and Vansina, 1988: 750-93, and Cambridge Encyclopedia, 1981: 57-86). Population displacements and human migrations are neither unique to Africa nor confined to the 20th century. They are the inevitable companions of war, civil conflict and prolonged economic deprivation.

35 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Refugees in Africa as mentioned in this paper view educational attainment as their only hope for survival and for earning a respectable livelihood, either in the country of asylum or after they are repatriated.
Abstract: Refugees in Africa number about four million. Some of them, uprooted during the struggles for independence, have been in refuge for over 30 years. Others were uprooted during the post-independence period, when their views were considered revolutionary and dangerous to the regimes in power. As an attempt to solve the refugee problem, some countries, like Tanzania, have granted refugees the status of naturalized citizens. Other countries, like Zimbabwe and Uganda, have encouraged immediate return and repatriation. Others have a wait-and-see attitude. In all cases, refugees are placed in a very awkward postion. They have little say and their material possessions are meager. Uprooted from their motherland, they view educational attainment as, in most cases, their only hope for survival and for earning a respectable livelihood, either in the country of asylum or after they are repatriated. This desire is strengthened by their awareness that the educated in the young independent African states hold the reins of power. Refugees and returnees, therefore, look at education with great hope and expectations (Kabera, forthcoming). Most of the refugees in Africa come from rural areas where educational facilities are, on the whole, deficient or non-existent. The situation does not improve when they leave home. The hope of making up for an insufficient education while in asylum is curtailed when the refugees are placed in remote reception areas devoid of educational facilities. Other places simply offer few chances for educational attainment (CIMADE et al., 1986: 110). Arrangements to organize and run schools take more time and resources than are available.

17 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The impact of the British administration on the status of the Hausa-Fulani feudal aristocrats by simply examining the aristocrats' relationship with the British officials was examined in this article.
Abstract: It is currently assumed by many scholars that the British ruled northern Nigeria through the indirect rule system The essence of this system, according to our authorities, was to maintain the cultural and religious status quo (Perham, 1960; Temple, [1918] 1968; Crowder and Ikime, 1970) This assumption has fostered the belief that the British administration in northern Nigeria had very little impact on the traditional political system and society Hence, many writers who have written on the British administration in northern Nigeria have tended to ignore the traditional political system and society Thus, while we have scholarly works on the relationship between the British officials and the chiefs of northern Nigeria (Heussler, 1968), little work has been done on the relationship between the chiefs and their subjects Yet we cannot adequately assess the impact of the British administration on the status of the Hausa-Fulani feudal aristocrats by simply examining the aristocrats' relationship with the British officials We also need to examine the extent to which the British administration affected the relationship between the chiefs and their subjects British rule in northern Nigeria, like any other alien rule in Africa, whether it was French or Portuguese, was a culturalizing agent which affected every fiber of the society The British as colonizers had to create a sequacious society, which would be conducive to the chief aim of their rule, ie, economic exploitation, from the restive communities of the precolonial days (Last, 1970: 345-57)


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an attempt to analyze and comprehend the social dynamics that generate the persistent syndrome of political instability in Nigeria, and on that basis to hazard a conjecturel about the future of the Nigerian state from past and current trends, as this might be shaped by systematic challenges.
Abstract: The elusive and aggravating problem of instituting a viable political order based on effective, legitimate and authoritative government in Nigeria has no doubt become in recent times one of the most pressing and fundamental preoccupations of its decisionmakers and the public alike, as the ongoing political debate attests. This paper represents essentially an attempt to analyze and comprehend the social dynamics that generate the persistent syndrome of political instability in Nigeria, and on that basis to hazard a conjecturel about the future of the Nigerian state from past and current trends, as this might be shaped by systematic challenges. Stated differently, the primary objective of the present analysis (in terms of its explanatory and projective dimensions) is in response to the intriguing question of why a state once considered a "showpiece of decolonizing Africa" could then manage to "plummet from such an apogee of grace" (Kirk-Greene, 1976: 7) and come perilously close first to collapse, then to constitutional chaos and a bloody civil war, and finally to a rapid interchange between civilian and military regimes. The first section below is intended as a preliminary methodological note to the second and final sections: examination of extant theoretical perspectives on instability and political order in Nigeria, and a probabilistic projection of the future from past trends, respectively.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The African crisis: The Way Out as discussed by the authors is a critique of the dominant ideology of development in the West that reduces Africans to the status of perpetual dependents, unable to stand on their own or to achieve sustainability of development programs and projects initiated by outside experts.
Abstract: I would like to thank my dear friend Adell Patton, Jr., whose advice and support I have enjoyed for over 20 years, for having suggested the title of this address: “The African Crisis: The Way Out.” Many other people, including colleagues in the African Association of Political Science, have helped shape most of the ideas that I present here. Needless to say, any errors or shortcomings are my own. Last year, my predecessor delivered a brilliant critique of the dominant ideology of development. The theory and practice of development in the West have reduced Africans to the status of perpetual dependents, unable to stand on their own or to achieve “sustainability” of development programs and projects initiated by outside experts. Characteristic of the fads and slogans proper to this trade, “sustainability” is one of the current watch words in the development community of public agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), international organizations, the Washington Beltway Bandits and like-minded consultants elsewhere, and fellow travelers in the academic community. The irony of the situation, as Aidan Southall so cleverly pointed out by analogy to Alur claims of rainmaking, is that our people were capable of taking care of themselves before these development experts set foot in Africa. While listening to Southall, I concluded that the issue of development deserved further attention from members of this Association. In celebrating continuity and change in African studies in honor of Melville J. Herskovits, it behooves us to ask critical questions on the African predicament and on the responsibility of scholars engaged in policy-relevant research.



Journal Article
TL;DR: The authors presented three papers from a symposium on refugees in Africa, focusing on forced displacement with particular reference to Southern Africa, and evaluated educational programs for refugees and returnees in Uganda.
Abstract: This issue contains three papers from a symposium on refugees in Africa. The focus is on forced displacement with particular reference to Southern Africa. The second paper evaluates educational programs for refugees and returnees in Uganda. The third paper examines repatriation. (ANNOTATION)




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Men are the structural locus, as mothers and sisters, of group unity and, as wives of group fission, in Bara society as discussed by the authors, where women are seen as a ''tenuous balance between opposed qualities of maleness and femaleness''.
Abstract: and order exist on a continuum from complementary to antagonistic, corresponding symbolically to individuals' progression through the life course from the chaos of birth to the final order of the tomb. They are the generative basis of Bara social organization, constituting Bara ideology and motivating individuals' everyday behavior. Thus Bara society is seen to be not an imposed and rigid structure, but rather a \"tenuous balance between opposed qualities of maleness and femaleness\" (p. 118). Individual behavior and the ordering and re-ordering of social groups occur in a context of social and ritual behavior founded on male-female oppositions. The eternal social order of the male ancestors is in creative tension with the immediate and ephemeral social order in which women are the structural locus, as mothers and sisters, of group unity and, as wives, of group fission. In his field work, Hunting'ton collected data on women because the presence of his wife and young son gave him access to information from women. He only wishes he had collected more information on women—something he no doubt would do in the present era of growing awareness of the value of including females in research endeavors. As Huntington points out in his concluding self-critical remarks, his research was limited to one village and thus was \"village-bound\" (p. 130). Consequently, he neither relates his analysis to the wider Bara society or the Malagasy context, nor to issues of social change often subsumed under the rubric of modernization. His analysis is suspended in the timelessness of both the ethnographic present and a structuralist approach. Students in introductory classes are likely to find this book too cool, to remote from the heat of life to grab their interest, but would be stimulating for upper level undergraduate and graduate students dealing with kinship and social organization, theory, gender and ritual. Huntington argues that gender makes a better starting point for studying and teaching about society than the more conventional kinship approach of anthropology. Gender, he says, is a \"superb bridge for transcultural translation\" (p. 133) because gender is universal, logically prior to kinship, dynamic because of its inherent oppositions and complementarity, and complex in the sense that it crosscuts various levels of social systems.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mbembe as discussed by the authors put into his elegant prose amounts to considerably more than a mere exercice de style, a genre at which the French are unsurpassed; by the same token his undisguised disdain for empirical facts is not the least disappointing aspect of this otherwise masterful reflexion.
Abstract: notes at the bottom of almost every page, a kind of throw-away gesture presumably intended to obviate the need for further elaboration. What Mbembe puts into his elegant prose amounts to considerably more than a mere exercice de style—a genre at which the French are unsurpassed; by the same token his undisguised disdain for empirical facts is not the least disappointing aspect of this otherwise masterful reflexion. One can hardly take him to task, however, for not having written the book that one might wish he had written.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analysis of Nigeria's political culture of consciousness and argue that ethnicity mattered less than local influence (who ran as candidate), proper deference by a party to local norms (its "Hausaization"), and pragmatic evaluations by villagers of likely material gains.
Abstract: an immensely valuable contribution to our understanding of Nigerian politics. Its largely descriptive character is also its strength, for events are presented in detail (with supporting anecdotes and quotes from the participants) as they happened and without a theoretical ax to grind. The data he presents are exciting and it would be useful to have similar election studies and results, even distorted as they are by malfeasance and manipulation (but in known ways), for other local areas. Once events have passed, those data are lost and much of the empirical basis and capacity for macro-level generalizations disappears. Common concepts to explain Nigerian politics simply do not fit here. For example, though Yardaji is an ethnically homogeneous village, non-Hausa parties and candidates (even when labelled as such by the villagers) received substantial numbers of votes. The vote for Shagari (the obvious ethnically preferred candidate) in the presidential election ran below the national average, and Azikiwe received one quarter of the votes cast. Again, in the House of Representatives election, the candidate for the NPP (the Tbo' party) received two thirds of the vote. Miles thinks these results show the \"success of electoral ethnic secularization under the Second Republic\" (p. 109). Ethnicity existed. Villagers stereotyped other groups and they saw their own culture and traditions as legitimately superior. But ethnicity mattered less than local influence (who ran as candidate), proper deference by a party to local norms (its \"Hausaization\"), and pragmatic evaluations by villagers of likely material gains. We arrive at a paradox. Both Graf and Miles are accurate in their descriptions, though these differ. The paradox, then, is one of theorizing and its resolution requires the expansion of theory toward a non-paradigmatic stance and framework. The explanation of Nigerian society and politics cannot be sought within the confines of one model but needs to take in concepts from any framework, whenever they are accurate and relevant. So the radical approach needs to incorporate the variety of motivations, and their expressions in political and social conflict and competition, as equally authentic, as genuine expressions of interests and values by all social groupings. The crucial variable missing from Grafs analysis is a meaningful notion of political culture of consciousness. Miles supplies some of the evidence and arguments which could be used to expand the radical framework into a more accurate and less gap-ridden reflection of Nigerian realities.