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This title lays bare the reductive understandings motivating Western intervention in Africa, the inadequate tools it insists on employing, its refusal to be accountable to African citizenries, and, most important, its counterproductive consequences for peace, human rights, and justice.
In: The Cambridge journal of anthropology, Volume 36, Issue 2, p. 73-91
ISSN: 2047-7716
The African Studies Centre has been a privileged institutional form in Britain for knowledge production on Africa since the end of colonialism. This article argues that the origin of these UK centres should be located in the colonial research institutes established in Africa, in particular the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute and the East African Institute of Social Research. Attention to the knowledge about Africa that was deemed authoritative by these institutes as well as to the institutions and structures underpinning that knowledge production can raise important questions about today's centres that need to be addressed as part of a decolonization agenda.
In: Perspectives on politics, Volume 13, Issue 1, p. 164-166
ISSN: 1541-0986
In: Development and change, Volume 45, Issue 3, p. 608-630
ISSN: 1467-7660
ABSTRACTTraditional justice, or what this article refers to as 'ethnojustice', claims to promote social reconstruction, peace and justice after episodes of war by rebuilding traditional order. Ethnojustice has become an increasingly prominent mode of transitional justice in northern Uganda. As such interventions multiply throughout Africa, it is essential to probe their political and practical consequences. This article situates ethnojustice theoretically within the broader discourse, practice and institutions of transitional justice, and historically within the reaction against orthodox liberal transitional justice from within the industry. Through an engagement with ethnojustice texts and interventions in the Acholi region of northern Uganda, the article argues that ethnojustice can end up extending forms of unaccountable, patriarchal power within Acholi society, funded and supported by the Ugandan state and international donors. In addition to underpinning this project of social discipline, ethnojustice also benefits the Ugandan state in its effort to avoid accountability for its violence during the war.
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Volume 51, Issue 3, p. 537-538
ISSN: 1469-7777
In: African security, Volume 5, Issue 3-4, p. 160-178
ISSN: 1939-2214
In: MISR Working Paper No.7
SSRN
Working paper
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 179-215
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 119-153
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 15-44
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 3-14
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 216-239
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 45-89
In: Displacing Human RightsWar and Intervention in Northern Uganda, p. 240-252