Journal•ISSN: 0856-0056
The African Review
Brill
About: The African Review is an academic journal published by Brill. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Politics & Tanzania. It has an ISSN identifier of 0856-0056. Over the lifetime, 332 publications have been published receiving 1957 citations. The journal is also known as: A journal of African politics, development and international affairs.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This theory takes as its point of departure two of the most glaring facts about this world: the tremendous inequality, within and between nations, in almost all aspects of human living conditions, including the power to decide over those living conditions; and the resistance of this inequality to change as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: This theory takes as its point of departure two of the most glaring facts about this world: the tremendous inequality, within and between nations, in almost all aspects of human living conditions, including the power to decide over those living conditions; and the resistance of this inequality to change.
1,214 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify Tanzanian Ujamaa with Scientific Socialism in certain ideological essentials, bearing in mind that historically the theory of socialism preceded the establishment of socialism as a system in any part of the globe.
Abstract: This article attempts to identify Tanzanian Ujamaa with Scientific Socialism in certain ideological essentials. It is an exercise in theory, bearing in mind that historically the theory of socialism preceded the establishment of socialism as a system in any part of the globe.
20 citations
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19 citations
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TL;DR: Van Onselen's study of African mine labour in Southern Rhodesia is of exceptional importance in that it relates the economic history of the gold mining industry that sustained this central African colony in its early days to the making of the African working class.
Abstract: The development of an African working class has received some attention from historians and anthropologists. 1 However, Van Onselen' s study of African mine labour in Southern Rhodesia is of exceptional importance in that it relates the economic history of the gold mining industry that sustained this central African colony in its early days to the making of the African working class in Southern Rhodesia.
18 citations
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TL;DR: After the end of the Kiriji wars and the imposition of colonial rule on Ibadan in 1893, demobilized warriors and others sought land to farm in the hitherto uncultivated forest lands to the south of the city as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: After the end of the Kiriji wars and the imposition of colonial rule on Ibadan in 1893, demobilized warriors and others sought land to farm in the hitherto uncultivated forest lands to the south of the city. The development of transport and marketing facilities stimulated farmers to adapt existing resources and institutions to meet the metropolitan demand for cocoa.
17 citations