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Capital cities in Africa : power and powerlessness / edited by Simon Bekker and Göran Therborn.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cape Town, South Africa : HSRC Press, 2012.Description: 220 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780796923509
  • 0796923507
  • 9782869784956
  • 2869784953
  • 9780796923516
  • 0796923515
  • 9780796923523
  • 0796923523
Other title:
  • Power and powerlessness : capital cities in Africa
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 307.760967 23
LOC classification:
  • JF1900 .C37 2012
Online resources: Summary: "Capital cities today remain central to both nations and states. They host centres of political power, not only national, but in some cases regional and global as well, thus offering major avenues to success, wealth and privilege. For these reasons capitals simultaneously become centres of "counter-power", locations of high-stakes struggles between the government and the opposition. This volume focuses on capital cities in nine sub-Saharan African countries, and traces how the power vested in them has evolved through different colonial backgrounds, radically different kinds of regimes after independence, waves of popular protest, explosive population growth and in most cases stunted economic development. Starting at the point of national political emancipation, each case study explores the complicated processes of nation-state building through its manifestation in the "urban geology" of the city - its architecture, iconography, layout and political use of urban space. Although the evolution of each of these cities is different, they share a critical demographic feature: an extraordinarily rapid process of urbanisation that is more politically than economically driven. Overwhelmed by the inevitable challenges resulting from this urban sprawl, the governments seated in most of these capital cities are in effect both powerful - wielding power over their populace -and powerless, lacking power to implement their plans and to provide for their inhabitants"--Publisher description.
Item type: Book
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Current library Call number Status Barcode
TAMCAS Library TAMCAS General shelves JF1900 .C37 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 75656

Arises from a conference held in 2008 in Dakar, Senegal, hosted by the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA)

Published in association with CODESRIA.

Includes bibliographical references.

"Capital cities today remain central to both nations and states. They host centres of political power, not only national, but in some cases regional and global as well, thus offering major avenues to success, wealth and privilege. For these reasons capitals simultaneously become centres of "counter-power", locations of high-stakes struggles between the government and the opposition. This volume focuses on capital cities in nine sub-Saharan African countries, and traces how the power vested in them has evolved through different colonial backgrounds, radically different kinds of regimes after independence, waves of popular protest, explosive population growth and in most cases stunted economic development. Starting at the point of national political emancipation, each case study explores the complicated processes of nation-state building through its manifestation in the "urban geology" of the city - its architecture, iconography, layout and political use of urban space. Although the evolution of each of these cities is different, they share a critical demographic feature: an extraordinarily rapid process of urbanisation that is more politically than economically driven. Overwhelmed by the inevitable challenges resulting from this urban sprawl, the governments seated in most of these capital cities are in effect both powerful - wielding power over their populace -and powerless, lacking power to implement their plans and to provide for their inhabitants"--Publisher description.

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