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  1. (-FY2017) Growth and Poverty Reduction
  2. Ethnic Diversity and Economic Instability in Africa: Policies for Harmonious Development

Ethnic Patriotism and Markets in African History

https://doi.org/10.18884/00000620
https://doi.org/10.18884/00000620
10cd4fb3-6258-460a-a026-402aa4e94328
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
JICA-RI_WP_No.20_2010.pdf JICA-RI_WP_No.20_2010.pdf (469.4 kB)
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Item type 報告書 / Research Paper(1)
公開日 2010-10-05
タイトル
タイトル Ethnic Patriotism and Markets in African History
言語
言語 eng
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Moral economy
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Moral Ethnicity
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Patriotism
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Political Tribalism
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18ws
資源タイプ research report
ID登録
ID登録 10.18884/00000620
ID登録タイプ JaLC
報告年度
日付 2010-10-05
日付タイプ Issued
著者 Lonsdale, John

× Lonsdale, John

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en Lonsdale, John

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内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 African economic and social history since 1800 suggests that the relationships between ethnic consciousness and market transaction is very varied and largely unpredictable. The early twentieth century was a period of important change. Before 1900 labour was scarce and land abundant: inter-ethnic relations were relatively flexible, thanks to a general demand for mobile labour supplies. By 1960 population growth meant that property had become more valuable than labour: inter-ethnic relations became harder, thanks also to the way in which the colonial imposition of state structures had tended to institutionalise ethnic groups as units of political competition. Against this broad periodisation of social, economic, and political change, this chapter's case studies illustrate widely differing contexts and processes across African time and space. Much has depended on economic geography and on highly contingent historical circumstances, as also on the nature of the commodity traded in Africa's markets, whether labour (slave or free, skilled or unskilled), foodstuffs, cash crops, property, and political influence. While analysis of ethno-market relations in Africa has generally focused on 'horizontal' inequalities between ethno-regional groups, this chapter places equal, if not more, emphasis on changing 'vertical' social inequalities between persons or categories (gender, generation, class) within ethnic groups as a source of social unrest and political pressure. Internal, intra-ethnic tension over the 'moral economy' between the strong and the weak, rich and poor, can provoke a crisis of 'moral ethnicity', a sense of loss of moral community. This may provoke a crisis of 'political tribalism', as internal tension is dissipated in external competition. The contrast between the relative degree of internal tension within the Kikuyu and Luo peoples of Kenya provides an instructive case study of these possible connections between internal and external ethnic patriotisms. The chapter ends by proposing that Africa's history suggests that economists must look for more flexible, more agent-based, more class-conscious, models of possible ethnic relations with market economy than those that are currently relied upon.
号
号 Working Paper;20
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