|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The debate on governance originates in the OECD world. At the
latest since the postcolonial debate, we know that we need to
"test" our assumptions under radically different conditions. This
book offers an extended perspective of local self-governance by
examining cases from South Asia, Africa, and Latin America,
together with a study of militias in the USA. The chapters present
a wide variety of local actors who pursue different notions of
order legitimized by local traditions based on hierarchy or deeply
rooted communalism, Islamic theology, or grassroots democracy. Some
local actors claim a state-like authority and challenge the
territorial state. In such cases, there is no longer "a shadow
hierarchy" but opposition to the state. Different violent actors
fight for supremacy, and the state is just one actor among others.
The empirical studies presented in this book show how different
kinds of local self-governance are combined with varieties of
statehood, and thus contribute to an understanding of the notion of
governance in a fundamental sense that goes beyond the special case
of the OECD world.
This book contends that conventional class concepts are not able to
adequately capture social inequality and socio-cultural
differentiation in Africa. Earlier empirical findings concerning
ethnicity, neo-traditional authorities, patron-client relations,
lifestyles, gender, social networks, informal social security, and
even the older debate on class in Africa, have provided evidence
that class concepts do not apply; yet these findings have mostly
been ignored. For an analysis of the social structures and
persisting extreme inequality in African societies - and in other
societies of the world - we need to go beyond class, consider the
empirical realities and provincialise our conventional theories.
This book develops a new framework for the analysis of social
structure based on empirical findings and more nuanced approaches,
including livelihood analysis and intersectionality, and will be
useful for students and scholars in African studies and development
studies, sociology, social anthropology, political science and
geography.
This book contends that conventional class concepts are not able to
adequately capture social inequality and socio-cultural
differentiation in Africa. Earlier empirical findings concerning
ethnicity, neo-traditional authorities, patron-client relations,
lifestyles, gender, social networks, informal social security, and
even the older debate on class in Africa, have provided evidence
that class concepts do not apply; yet these findings have mostly
been ignored. For an analysis of the social structures and
persisting extreme inequality in African societies - and in other
societies of the world - we need to go beyond class, consider the
empirical realities and provincialise our conventional theories.
This book develops a new framework for the analysis of social
structure based on empirical findings and more nuanced approaches,
including livelihood analysis and intersectionality, and will be
useful for students and scholars in African studies and development
studies, sociology, social anthropology, political science and
geography.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|