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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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Djimon Hounsou

Actor

Location: USA
instagram.com/djimon_hounsou/?hl=en

Hounsou Djimon

Actor

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

K. Ulrich Hounyo

Associate Professor of Economics, State University of New York at Albany

Email: khounyo@albany.edu

Hounyo K. Ulrich

Associate Professor of Economics, State University of New York at Albany

Economic
Professional Contact

Hugo, Katja, and Maggie Carter. (2022).Between Fault Lines and Front Lines: Shifting Power in an Unequal World. Bloomsbury Publishing.

Inequality is one of today's greatest challenges, obstructing poverty reduction and sustainable development. As the power of elites grows and societal gaps widen, institutions representing the public good and universal values are increasingly disempowered or co-opted, and visions of social justice and equity side-lined.  

This book explores the roles of elites and institutions of power in the deepening of social and economic cleavages across the globe, by asking how inequalities have reshaped structures from the local to the transnational level, and what consequences they have wrought. In addition, the contributors present examples of peaceful processes of policy change that have made societies greener and more socially just, levelled out social stratification, and devolved power and resources from elites to non-elites, or towards marginalized or discriminated groups. Based on cutting-edge empirical research, the chapters in this volume bring together conceptual thinking and a number of case studies from the Global North and South, combining different levels of analysis and a range of qualitative research methods to present solutions for closing the inequality gap.

Source: Book description by publisher

Hugo, Katja, and Maggie Carter. Between Fault Lines and Front Lines

This book explores the roles of elites and institutions of power in the deepening of social and economic cleavages across the globe, by asking how inequalities have reshaped structures from the local to the transnational level, and what consequences they have wrought.

Economic
Political
Bibliographic
Organization

Ibrahim El-Salahi

Artist (Painting)

Location: UK
instagram.com/ibrahimelsalahi/?hl=en

Ibrahim El-Salahi

Artist (Painting)

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Khaled  Hadji Ibrahim

Musician

Algeria
khaled-lesite.com

Ibrahim, Khaled Hadji

Musician

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Ibrahim Mahama

Artist (Installations)

Location: Ghana
instagram.com/ibrahimmahama3

Ibrahim Mahama

Artist (Installations)

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Igoe, Jim. “Becoming Indigenous Peoples: Difference, Inequality, and the Globalization of East African Identity Politics.” African Affairs (London) 105, no. 420 (2006): 399–420. https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adi127.

Although the term ‘indigenous’ implies a state preceding that which is foreign or acquired, indigenous movements in Africa are a recent phenomenon. Drawing from the author’s research of the Tanzanian indigenous peoples’ movement in the 1990s, this article argues that indigenous identity in Tanzania does not represent miraculously preserved pre-colonial traditions or even a special sort of marginalization. Rather, it reflects the convergence of existing identity categories with shifting global structures of development and governance. Specifically, it reflects a combination of ‘cultural distinctiveness’ and effective strategies of extraversion in the context of economic and political liberalization. The Maasai, who are ‘culturally distinct’, and who have a long tradition of enrolling outsiders in their cause, naturally dominate this movement.

Source: Article's abstract

Igoe, Jim. Becoming Indigenous Peoples

Drawing from the author’s research of the Tanzanian indigenous peoples’ movement in the 1990s, this article argues that indigenous identity in Tanzania does not represent miraculously preserved pre-colonial traditions or even a special sort of marginalization.

Political
Bibliographic
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