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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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Brigalia Bam

Former Chairperson, Institute for Global Dialogue

Sector:

NGO

Contact:

info@igd.org.za

Bam, Brigalia

Bam, Brigalia
2023

Former Chairperson, Institute for Global Dialogue

Coercive
Profile

Banana Hill Gallery

Art gallery

Nairobi, Kenya

http://bkenya.com/banana-hill-gallery/

Description:

Banana Hill Art Gallery exhibits a superb selection of African  contemporary artwork and has showcased over 70 artists and sculptors  principally from Kenya and East Africa.

Banana Hill Gallery

Banana Hill Gallery, Nairobi, Kenya

Aesthetic
Organization

Banjo, Georgia. “African Fashion Designers Will Be in the Spotlight.” The Economist, November 8, 2021. https://www.economist.com/the-world-ahead/2021/11/08/african-fashion-designers-will-be-in-the-spotlight

“In June 2022 the Victoria and Albert (V&A)museum in London will stage an exhibition on the history of African fashion, from independence through to the present day. It is an ambitious task: no exhibition could ever do justice to the fashions of an entire continent. But with 250 pieces, curators hope to show that there is far more than tassels, beading and wax prints. The V&A show will shine a spotlight on African designers, such as Lagos Space Programme, who are increasingly being recognised in the world’s fashion capitals. African talents are vying for some of the industry’s biggest awards, such as the LVMH prize for young artists - Thebe Magugu of South Africa is a recent winner.”

[Source: Excerpt from the article]

Banjo, Georgia. “African Fashion Designers Will Be in the Spotlight.”

Banjo, Georgia
November 8, 2021

African talents are vying for some of the industry’s biggest awards, such as the LVMH prize for young artists - Thebe Magugu of South Africa is a recent winner.

Aesthetic
Economic
Bibliographic

Banky W (Olubankole Wellington)

Singer/songwriter/pastor/actor/politician/entrepreneur

Nigeria
instagram.com/bankywellington/

Banky W

Singer/songwriter/pastor/actor/politician/entrepreneur

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Banning, Kass, Marieme Lo, and Julie MacArthur. “Ways of Seeing (in) African Cinema.” Filmed in December 2013 at the Toronto International Film Festival, ON, Canada. Video,1:19:41. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTq5ayWe2tU

Trends in contemporary African film production, film programming, and popular visual culture are examined through a panel discussion and screening of the short film Mwansa the Great.

[Source: Video description].

Banning, Kass, Marieme Lo, and Julie MacArthur. “Ways of Seeing (in) African Cinema.”

Banning, Kass, Marieme Lo, and Julie MacArthur
December 2013

Trends in contemporary African film production, film programming, and popular visual culture are examined through a panel discussion and screening of the short film Mwansa the Great.

Aesthetic
Bibliographic

Baobab Books

Publishing

Switzerland (Basel)

baobabbooks.ch
Description:

Baobab Books is a registered charitable association, based in Basel, Switzerland, committed to promoting cultural diversity in children and youth literature.

Baobab Books

Baobab Books, Switzerland (Basel)

Aesthetic
Organization

Barany, Zoltan. “Military Influence in Foreign Policy-Making: Changing Dynamics in North African Regimes.” The Journal of North African Studies 24,no. 4 (July 4, 2019): 579–98. doi:10.1080/13629387.2018.1525004.

The strong political position armed forces enjoy in authoritarian states and the high priority military elites assign to foreign affairs would lead one to believe that in North Africa – a region made up of authoritarian states with the sole, recent, and partial exception of Tunisia – generals had the political standing to exert a major influence on foreign policy decisions. This would not be a correct assumption because in this region the armed forces’ political influence is actually highly variable. Of the five states analyzed in this article (Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia) the military is the dominant political institution only in Algeria and Egypt. In the other three countries, the army plays a marginal political role and, by extension, possesses modest foreign policy influence. Moreover, the political clout of these armies is not constant. Since the Arab Spring the political influence of Egyptian generals has considerably increased, that of their Tunisian colleagues has marginally risen, while the status of Libya’s military leaders has diminished.

Source: article abstract

Barany, Zoltan. “Military Influence in Foreign Policy-Making

Barany, Zoltan
July 4, 2019

Of the five states analyzed in this article (Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia) the military is the dominant political institution only in Algeria and Egypt. In the other three countries, the army plays a marginal political role and, by extension, possesses modest foreign policy influence.

Coercive
Bibliographic

Bareebe, Gerald. “An Army with a State or a State with an Army? The Military and Post-Conflict Governance in Uganda and Rwanda.” ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2020.

This dissertation draws from original qualitative data collected from Uganda and Rwanda to explain strategies used by actors that win civil wars to restructure the authority and reach of the state in a new postwar society. It shows how the postwar regime in Uganda inherited a “residue” social structure, characterised by the persistence of resilient and well-entrenched elite interests. A key finding is that, to gain trust and legitimise his rule, the postwar regime leader in Uganda adopted a strategy involving co-optation of, collaboration with, and concessions to these interests, which ultimately led to the creation of a broad-based system of government designed purposely to accommodate varying interests of these social groups. By contrast, the post-genocide regime in Rwanda inherited a political structure that was completely shattered--without much “residue”. To gain legitimacy, the elites within the RPF (who had won the war) exploited the political vacuum to transform what had been a guerrilla group into a strong centralised military regime, justifying the creation of a strong and cohesive military regime as a buttress against genocide.

Source: extracted from dissertation's abstract

Bareebe, Gerald. An Army with a State or a State with an Army

This dissertation draws from original qualitative data collected from Uganda and Rwanda to explain strategies used by actors that win civil wars to restructure the authority and reach of the state in a new postwar society.

Coercive
Political
Bibliographic
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