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Title
Ominous calm. Autochtony and sovereignty in Konkomba/Nanumba violence and peace, Ghana |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1887/14508 |
Date
2009 |
Author(s)
Wienia,M. |
Abstract
Why did a conflict between a majority of settlers (Konkomba), claiming equal citizenship, and a minority of autochtons (Nanumba) produce both Ghana's largest incidents of ethnic cleansing and a subsequent ominous calm? Analysing the post-1996 peace accord Konkomba/Nanumba coexistence against their violent past and in Ghana's political context as one of Africa's promosing nations, this ethnography shows that the conflict has two forms. One is sovereign violence and another is a persistent silence in relation to legalistic speeches. Breaking out of these forms may not so much require a reconciliation, as peace brokers proposed, but a political compromise. Martijn Wienia studied Cultural Anthropology, Development Sociology and African Studies at Leiden University. Currently, he works as policy officer with the WOTRO Science for Global Development division of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) in The Hague. |
Subject(s)
Africa; African studies; Ghana; Netherlands; Peace; Violence |
Publisher
African Studies Centre, Leiden |
Type of publication
Book (monograph) |
Format
application/pdf; application/pdf; application/pdf |
Source
223 (2009) |
Repository
Leiden - Africanists at University of Leiden
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Added to C-A: 2010-04-22;10:42:39 |
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