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Disrupting Territories - Land, Commodification & Conflict in Sudan (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,189
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Disrupting Territories - Land, Commodification & Conflict in Sudan (Hardcover)
Series: Eastern Africa Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Examines the commodification of land rights and the effect of
international licences for resource extraction on the pastoral
communities of Sudan. Nowhere has a range of case studies of Sudan
been brought together in a single volume. Given the concern with
the growing number and complexity of conflicts in Sudan and South
Sudan there is a significant readership in academic circles and
from those involved in humanitarian organisations of all kinds.
Professor Peter Woodward, University of Reading "A timely
contribution to an important set of debates ... tackles questions
emerging from discussions about modernisation, urbanisation and
globalisation from an explicitly local angle with regards to
Sudan." Dr Harry Verhoeven, University of Oxford Sudan experiences
one of the most severe fissures between society and territory in
Africa. Not only were its international borders redrawn when South
Sudan separated in 2011, but conflicts continue to erupt over
access to land: territorial claims are challenged by local and
international actors; borders are contested; contracts governing
the privatization of resources are contentious; and the legal
entitlements to agricultural land are disputed. Under these new
dynamics of land grabbing and resource extraction, fundamental
relationships between people and land are being disrupted: while
land has become a global commodity, for millions it still serves as
a crucial reference for identity-formation and constitutes their
most important source of livelihood. This book seeks to disentangle
the emerging relationships between people and land in Sudan. The
first part focuses on the spatial impact of resource-extracting
economies: foreign agricultural land acquisitions; Chinese
investments in oil production; and competition between artisanal
and industrial gold mining. Detailed ethnographic case studies in
the second part, from Darfur, South Kordofan, Red Sea State,
Kassala, Blue Nile, and Khartoum State, show how rural people
experience "their" land vis-a-vis the latest wave of privatization
and commercialization of land rights. Joerg Gertel is Professor of
Economic Geography at Leipzig University; Richard Rottenburg is
Chair of Anthropology at the University of Halle; Sandra Calkins is
a Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Social
Anthropology in Halle
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