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This volume presents a wide selection of studies on the issues of
law, land dispute and conflict (mediation) in Africa, reconsidering
the role of state agents and other actors in these matters. The
focus is on analyzing how citizens, state institutions and
concerned (inter)national actors aim to find solutions to disputes,
tension and conflict that are part of social life. The authors have
approached the subject of Land, Law and Politics in Africa from a
variety of disciplinary angles. The issues at stake comprise land
access and land use, state politics and democratization efforts,
the relationship between constitutional/state law and customary
law, the challenges of urban and rural conflicts, border issues and
the conceptions of (human) rights. On the basis of new empirical
studies, the authors plead for a more holistic perspective on the
above issues and on developmental policy in general. The book has
15 chapters in four thematic parts, focusing on historical and
cultural aspects of politics and authority; land law and land
disputes; constitutionalism and politics; and conflict studies. The
volume is also a tribute to the work of Gerti Hesseling
(1946-2009), a Dutch Africanist with a successful career as a
scholar of constitutional and land law, focusing on West Africa.
'We cannot imagine life now without a mobile phone' is a frequent
comment when Africans are asked about mobile phones. They have
become part and parcel of the communication landscape in many urban
and rural areas of Africa and the growth of mobile telephony is
amazing: from 1 in 50 people being users in 2000 to 1 in 3 in 2008.
Such growth is impressive but it does not even begin to tell us
about the many ways in which mobile phones are being appropriated
by Africans and how they are transforming or are being transformed
by society in Africa. This volume ventures into such appropriation
and mutual shaping. Rich in theoretical innovation and empirical
substantiation, it brings together reflections on developments
around the mobile phone by scholars of six African countries
(Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ghana, Mali, Sudan and Tanzania) who
explore the economic, social and cultural contexts in which the
mobile phone is being adopted, adapted and harnessed by mobile
Africa.
This book explores the notion of agency in a range of empirical
situations in Africa. Agency directs our quest for an understanding
of the dynamics and social transformations of African situations to
the domains of creativity, inventiveness and reflexivity. It
emphasizes the possibilities individuals and social groups perceive
when faced with the constraints that tend to mark African social
life. The case studies provide an alternative view of people and
society in Africa by looking at the ways social strength is created
in the hope of overcoming many of the structural limitations
encountered in daily life. 'Strength beyond Structure' challenges
the optimism that is engrained in the development rhetoric about
Africa by making agency the subject of empirical scrutiny.
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