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Living with bad surroundings : war, history, and everyday moments in northern Uganda

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TLDR
Finnstrom as mentioned in this paper provides a clear-eyed assessment of the historical, cultural, and political underpinnings of the civil war while maintaining his focus on Acholi efforts to achieve "good surroundings,” viable futures for themselves and their families.
Abstract
Since 1986, the Acholi people of northern Uganda have lived in the crossfire of a violent civil war, with the Lord’s Resistance Army and other groups fighting the Ugandan government. Acholi have been murdered, maimed, and driven into displacement. Thousands of children have been abducted and forced to fight. Many observers have perceived Acholiland and northern Uganda to be an exception in contemporary Uganda, which has been celebrated by the international community for its increased political stability and particularly for its fight against AIDS. These observers tend to portray the Acholi as war-prone, whether because of religious fanaticism or intractable ethnic hatreds. In Living with Bad Surroundings, Sverker Finnstrom rejects these characterizations and challenges other simplistic explanations for the violence in northern Uganda. Foregrounding the narratives of individual Acholi, Finnstrom enables those most affected by the ongoing “dirty war” to explain how they participate in, comprehend, survive, and even resist it.Finnstrom draws on fieldwork conducted in northern Uganda between 1997 and 2006 to describe how the Acholi—especially the younger generation, those born into the era of civil strife—understand and attempt to control their moral universe and material circumstances. Structuring his argument around indigenous metaphors and images, notably the Acholi concepts of good and bad surroundings, he vividly renders struggles in war and the related ills of impoverishment, sickness, and marginalization. In this rich ethnography, Finnstrom provides a clear-eyed assessment of the historical, cultural, and political underpinnings of the civil war while maintaining his focus on Acholi efforts to achieve “good surroundings,” viable futures for themselves and their families.

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Journal ArticleDOI

From Violence to Voting: War and Political Participation in Uganda

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence for a link between war, violence and increased individual political participation and leadership among former combatants and victims of violence, and use this link to understand the deeper determinants of individual political behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Violence to Voting: War and Political Participation in Uganda

TL;DR: This article found evidence for a link from past violence to increased political engagement among ex-combatants in northern Uganda, where rebel recruitment generated quasiexperimental variation in who was conscripted by abduction.
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Seeds of distrust: conflict in Uganda

TL;DR: This article studied the effect of civil conflict on social capital, focusing on Uganda's experience during the last decade using individual and county-level data, and found that more intense fighting decreases generalized trust and increases ethnic identity, and that post-conflict economic recovery is slower in ethnically fractionalized counties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seeds of Distrust: Conflict in Uganda

TL;DR: This paper studied the effect of civil conflict on social capital, focusing on the experience of Uganda during the last decade, using individual and county-level data, and found that more intense fighting decreases generalized trust and increases ethnic identity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Logic of Child Soldiering and Coercion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors adapt theories of indus- trial organization to rebellious groups and show how, being less able fighters, chil- dren are attractive recruits if and only if they are easier to intimidate, indoctrinate, and misinform than adults.