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Books > History > African history
Electoral violence is a persistent problem in Zambia. This book is
a case study of the usage, importance and impact of Public
Diplomacy (PD) and Smart Power (SP) by the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID/Zambia) and Friedrich-Ebert
Stiftung (FES) in Zambia by means of collaborating with local NGOs
- the Foundation for Democratic Process (FODEP) and the Southern
African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes
(SACCORD) to help elections take place among poor, uneducated
voters without resorting to violence. General and by-election
periods have for more than five decades generated an increased
intensity of electoral violence by hired impoverished youth
political cadres who are increasingly becoming more daring and
lethal, capable of damaging property, inflicting injuries on
victims or causing death. There is a growing urgent need for
special-tailored programmes that target instigators and
perpetrators of electoral violence - more definitely needs to be
done besides efforts by international organisations. It is up to
citizens, local NGOs and especially political parties and
responsible public institutions to act in order to limit electoral
violence in Zambia.
Touts is a historical account of the troubled formation of a
colonial labor market in the Gulf of Guinea and a major
contribution to the historiography of indentured labor, which has
relatively few reference points in Africa. The setting is West
Africa's largest island, Fernando Po or Bioko in today's Equatorial
Guinea, 100 kilometers off the coast of Nigeria. The Spanish ruled
this often-ignored island from the mid-nineteenth century until
1968. A booming plantation economy led to the arrival of several
hundred thousand West African, principally Nigerian, contract
workers on steamships and canoes. In Touts, Enrique Martino traces
the confusing transition from slavery to other labor regimes,
paying particular attention to the labor brokers and their
financial, logistical, and clandestine techniques for bringing
workers to the island. Martino combines multi-sited archival
research with the concept of touts as "lumpen-brokers" to offer a
detailed study of how commercial labor relations could develop,
shift and collapse through the recruiters' own techniques, such as
large wage advances and elaborate deceptions. The result is a
pathbreaking reconnection of labor mobility, contract law, informal
credit structures and exchange practices in African history.
This book examines the political and economic philosophy of Chief
Jeremiah Oyeniyi Obafemi Awolowo and his concepts of democratic
socialism (Liberal Democratic Socialism). It studies how Chief
Awolowo and his political parties, first the Action Group (AG)
1951-1966 and later the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) 1978-1983,
acted in various Nigerian political settings. Chief Awolowo was a
principled man, who by a Spartan self-discipline and understanding
of himself, his accomplishments, failures and successes, was a
fearless leader. He has set an example of leadership for a new
generation of Nigerian politicians. He was not only a brilliant
politician, but a highly cerebral thinker, statesman, dedicated
manager, brilliant political economist, a Social Democrat, and a
committed federalist. From all accounts, Chief Awolowo knew the
worst and the best, laughter and sorrow, vilification and
veneration, tribulations and triumphs, poverty and prosperity,
failures and successes in life.
It is now forty years since the discovery of AIDS, but its origins
continue to puzzle doctors, scientists and patients. Inspired by
his own experiences working as a physician in a bush hospital in
Zaire, Jacques Pepin looks back to the early twentieth-century
events in central Africa that triggered the emergence of HIV/AIDS
and traces its subsequent development into the most dramatic and
destructive epidemic of modern times. He shows how the disease was
first transmitted from chimpanzees to man and then how military
campaigns, urbanisation, prostitution and large-scale colonial
medical interventions intended to eradicate tropical diseases
combined to disastrous effect to fuel the spread of the virus from
its origins in Leopoldville to the rest of Africa, the Caribbean
and ultimately worldwide. This is an essential perspective on
HIV/AIDS and on the lessons that must be learned as the world faces
another pandemic.
With the summer of 2012 marking half a century of independence for
Algeria, the Algerian War has been brought into discussions in
France once more, where parallels between the past and present are
revealed. This analysis takes an in-depth look at the war from 1954
to 1962 and the response from the French left. Drawing from
documents and interviews, it offers a full account of not only the
role of the revolutionary left in giving political and practical
solidarity to the Algerian liberation struggle, but also that of
the Trotskyists during that period. Including a section on how the
war has been reflected in fiction, this volume is sure to interest
academics across various fields.
Cecil John Rhodes lived from 1853 to 1902, a brief span, and was the renowned and world-famous founder of Rhodesia (1890-1980), the leading personality and figure in the Victorian world’s late nineteenth-century Africa empire.
Rhodes’ endeavours shaped the domains of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century Zambesia, and set down the trajectories marking southern Africa, while the Great Powers’ record of empire in Africa proved greatly inferior to Rhodesia’s. Zambesia’s long history of continuous turbulence on a troubled plateau was reversed by Rhodes’ Pioneer Column in 1890 when the ‘First Rhodesians’ arrived following five decades of itinerant white presence in Zambesia. The Occupation of Mashonaland in 1890, conquest of Matabeleland in 1893 and the end of native rebellions in 1896-97 set the stage for decades of enduring prosperity in Rhodesia, Rhodes’ most enduring legacy. Pax Rhodesiana lasted ninety years, ending in a civil war.
Then, Rhodes’ memorabilia and many memorials were subjected to modern cultural cleansing, the inheritor state in time eroding and declining into a failing state.
The defeat of Apartheid and triumph of non-racial democracy in South Africa was not the work of just a few individuals. Ultimately, it came about through the actions – large and small – of many principled, courageous people from all walks of life and backgrounds.
Some of these activists achieved enduring fame and recognition and their names today loom large in the annals of the anti-apartheid struggle. Others were engaged in a range of practical, hands-on activities outside of the public eye. These were the loyal foot soldiers of the liberation Struggle, the unsung workers at the coal face who, largely behind the scenes, made a difference on the ground and helped to bring about meaningful change.
Even though Apartheid was aimed at entrenching white power and privilege, a number of whites rejected that system and instead joined their fellow South Africans in opposing it. Of these, a noteworthy proportion came from the Jewish community.
Mensches in the Trenches tells the hitherto unrecorded stories of some of these activists and the essential, if seldom publicised role that they and others like them played in bringing freedom and justice to their country.
Though Graeco-Roman antiquity (‘classics’) has often been considered the handmaid of colonialism, its various forms have nonetheless endured through many of the continent’s decolonising transitions. Southern Africa is no exception. This book canvasses the variety of forms classics has taken in Zimbabwe, Mozambique and especially South Africa, and even the dynamics of transformation itself.
How does (u)Mzantsi classics (of southern Africa) look in an era of profound change, whether violent or otherwise? What are its future prospects? Contributors focus on pedagogies, historical consciousness, the creative arts and popular culture.
The volume, in its overall shape, responds to the idea of dialogue – in both the Greek form associated with Plato’s rendition of Socrates’ wisdom and in the African concept of ubuntu. Here are dialogues between scholars, both emerging and established, as well as students – some of whom were directly impacted by the Fallist protests.
Rather than offering an apologia for classics, these dialogues engage with pressing questions of relevance, identity, change, the canon, and the dynamics of decolonisation and potential recolonisation. The goal is to interrogate classics – the ways it has been taught, studied, perceived, transformed and even lived – from many points of view.
For every gallon of ink that has been spilt on the trans-Atlantic
slave trade and its consequences, only one very small drop has been
spent on the study of the forced migration of black Africans into
the Mediterranean world of Islam. From the ninth to the early
twentieth century, probably as many black Africans were forcibly
taken across the Sahara, up the Nile valley, and across the Red
Sea, as were transported across the Atlantic in a much shorter
period. Yet their story has not yet been told. This book provides
an introduction to this ""other"" slave trade, and to the Islamic
cultural context within which it took place, as well as the effect
this context had on those who were its victims. After an
introductory essay, there are sections on Basic Texts (Qur'an and
Hadith), Some Muslim Views on Slavery, Slavery and the Law,
Perceptions of Africans in Some Arabic and Turkish Writings, Slave
Capture, the Middle Passage, Slave Markets, Eunuchs and Concubines,
Domestic Service, Military Service, Religion and Community, Freedom
and Post-Slavery, and the Abolition of Slavery. A concluding
segment provides a first-person account of the capture,
transportation, and service in a Saharan oasis by a West African
male, as related to a French official in the 1930s.
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