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The Elite Africa Database is a curated collection of resources for researchers interested in African elites. Search by keyword and filter your results by power domain, entry format, date, and other parameters.

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Chiweza, Asiyati Lorraine. "The Ambivalent Role of Chiefs: Rural Decentralization Initiatives in Malawi." In State Recognition and Democratization in Sub-Saharan Africa, pp. 53-78. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2007.

Chiweza argues that democratic decentralization initiatives in Malawi have rather sought to reduce the role and influence of the chiefs in favor of locally elected local government councilors. Yet this has not succeeded in eroding chieftaincy as chiefs still have increased roles and influence in the rural areas. This makes the position of the local councilors a loose one. Because the chiefs act both as intermediaries and gatekeepers to the rural community, they have gained increased recognition as key development actors at the local level. As a result, donor agencies  and NGOS who wish to carry out activities within such communities require the chiefs’ authority and support for their programs. Chiweza concludes that the position of the chiefs and their constant engagement and interaction with locals makes them more visible as compared to the local councilors.

Chiweza, Asiyati Lorraine. "The Ambivalent Role of Chiefs"

Chiweza, Asiyati Lorraine
2007

Chiweza argues that democratic decentralization initiatives in Malawi have rather sought to reduce the role and influence of the chiefs in favor of locally elected local government councilors.

Ritual
Bibliographic

Chome, Ngala. “Land, Livelihoods and Belonging: Negotiating Change and Anticipating LAPSSET in Kenya’s Lamu County.” Journal of Eastern African Studies 14, no. 2 (2020): 310–31. https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2020.1743068.

To attract investments in mineral extraction, physical infrastructure and agricultural commercialization over a vast swathe of Northern Kenya, national politicians and bureaucrats are casting the area as being both abundant with land and resources, and as, conversely, ‘backward’, ‘unexploited’ and ‘empty’. Drawing on evidence from Lamu County, and focusing on the planned Lamu Port and South Sudan Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor, this article contends that such high-modernist and ‘new frontier’ discourses are usually complicated by the realities on the ground. Based on common perceptions about land and ethnicity, and how these are intertwined with the politics of belonging and redistribution, these realities exemplify complex economies of anticipation – through which networks of patronage, alliance, and mobilization are being created or entrenched in advance of major investments. This article argues that it is these anticipations – more than official designs – that will determine the future direction of LAPSSET, especially in respect to who will get what, when and how, within its promised prosperous future.

Source: Article's abstract.

Chome, Ngala. Land, Livelihoods and Belonging

To attract investments in mineral extraction, physical infrastructure and agricultural commercialization over a vast swathe of Northern Kenya, national politicians and bureaucrats are casting the area as being both abundant with land and resources, and as, conversely, ‘backward’, ‘unexploited’ and ‘empty’. Drawing on evidence from Lamu County, and focusing on the planned Lamu Port and South Sudan Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor, this article contends that such high-modernist and ‘new frontier’ discourses are usually complicated by the realities on the ground.

Aesthetic
Economic
Political
Bibliographic

Christelow, Allen, ed. Thus Ruled Emir Abbas: Selected Cases from the Records of the Emir of Kano's Judicial Council. No. 5. MSU Press, 2012.

Thus Ruled Emir Abbas is an important new research tool that reveals much about daily life in Kano, the wealthiest and most populous emirate of the African Sokoto Caliphate. It contains a selection of Kano Judicial Council documents, as well as their English translations, that deal with matters such as land disputes, tax collection disputes, and theft. These documents are invaluable resources that reveal much about Kano social, economic, and political life before the region came under the influence of colonial institutions, law, and language. This selection of records for more than 415 cases, along with their translations, will become essential reading for those interested in Nigeria’s past and will certainly become a standard work in the field of Nigerian history and anthropology.

[Source:https://muse.jhu.edu/book/8923]

Christelow, Allen, ed. Thus Ruled Emir Abbas

Christelow, Allen, ed.
2012

Thus Ruled Emir Abbas is an important new research tool that reveals much about daily life in Kano, the wealthiest and most populous emirate of the African Sokoto Caliphate.

Religious/Spritual
Bibliographic

Phyllis Christian

Institute for Democratic Governance

NGO
Ghana

edsoffice@ideg.org

Christian, Phyllis

Institute for Democratic Governance, Ghana

Coercive
Political
Economic
Professional Contact

Chika Chudi-duru

Lecturer, African indigenous textile art history

Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Nigeria

Email: cc.chudi-duru@unizik.edu.ng
https://profile.unizik.edu.ng/nau6836

Chudi-duru Chika

Lecturer, African indigenous textile art history, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Nigeria

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Rina Chunga-Kutama

Designer, Rich Factory

Sector: Fashion
South Africa
Level of Influence: Continental
facebook.com/people/RiCh-Factory/100059663134144/

Chunga- Kutama Rina

Designer, Fashion, South Africa

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Chéri Samba

Artist (Painting)

Democratic Republic of Congo
cherisamba.net

Chéri Samba

Artist (Painting)

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Jakkie Cilliers

Chairman, Institute for Security Studies

NGO
South Africa

iss@issafrica.org

Cilliers, Jakkie

Chairman, Institute for Security Studies

Coercive
Professional Contact
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