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A Tributary Model of State Formation - Ethiopia, 1600-2015 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018)
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A Tributary Model of State Formation - Ethiopia, 1600-2015 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018)
Series: Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A Tributary Model of State Formation: Ethiopia, 1600-2015 addresses
the perplexing question of why a pedigreed Ethiopian state failed
to transform itself into a nation-state. Using a
comparative-institutionalist framework, this book explores why
Ethiopia, an Afroasian civilizational state, has yet to build a
modern political order comprising a sturdy state, the rule of law,
and accountability to the ruled. The book provides a theoretical
framework that contrasts the European and the Afroasian modes of
state formation and explores the three major variants of the
Ethiopian state since 1600 (Gondar, Shewa, and Revolutionary). It
does this by employing the conceptual entry point of tributarism
and teases out the implications of this perspective for
refashioning the embattled postcolonial African political
institutions. The primary contribution of the book is the novel
framing of state formation through the lens of a landed Afroasiatic
peasantry in giving rise to a fragile state whose redistributive
preoccupation preempted the emergence of a productive economy to
serve as a buoyant revenue base. Unlike feudal Europe, the
dependence of the Afroasian state on arm's-length overlordship
rather than on tightly-managed landlordship incentivized endemic
extractive contests among elites with the capacity for violence for
the non-fixed tribute from independent wealth producers.
Tributarism, I argue here, stymied the transition from a resilient
statehood to a robust nation-statehood that befits an open-order
society. This book will be of interest to scholars in economics,
political science, political economics, and African Studies.
Berhanu Abegaz is Professor of Economics, College of William &
Mary (USA).
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