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World Affairs Online
Kenya: the quest for prosperity
In: Profiles, Nations of Contemporary Africa
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The Rural African Party: Political Participation in Tanzania
In: American political science review, Band 64, Heft 2, S. 548-571
ISSN: 1537-5943
Because the codes, rules and ideology of mass, single-party systems reach the village areas more slowly than do the tangible personalizations of party authority, a situation of potential misuse of power exists where rural party organizations operate. Peasants are aware of face-to-face confrontations by a familiar figure who has gained a party position; they are unaware of the precepts and regulations that the national party has laid down for the village level functionaries. Consequently, political victimization is most prounced at the very grass-root level that national leaders are attempting to integrate politically. Moreover, by its nature the rural party is a multi-faceted organization that is acceptable to the peasants because its leaders provide services that in more structured societies are carried out by specific agencies and contracts. Functions such as family arbitration, police investigation and criminal adjudication are mixed with the more classical party activities of representation and the dispensing of patronage.Taken together, the above two characteristics of a rural party—potential abuse, and the multi-faceted nature—significantly influence the extent and form of political participation in the areas they serve. This article attempts to analyze these characteristics in Tanzania, and thereafter to assess rural party participation, and more broadly to suggest the theoretical dimensions of political participation in a new nation.Participation, it may be argued, is the problempar excellencefor leaders of the new nations. The building of a state, both in terms of economic development and in the creation of a national consciousness, depends upon some type of participation by the citizens.
The Rural African Party: Political Participation in Tanzania
In: American political science review, Band 64, Heft 2
ISSN: 0003-0554
The Political Survival of Traditional Leadership
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 183-198
ISSN: 1469-7777
Viewed from the higher echelons of government in the new nations, the rural leader is an insignificant individual who goes about managing his local affairs and carrying out—with varying degrees of success—the policies and hopes of the government. Viewed from below, from the inner recesses of the village, the leader is a man of authority; a man who has used wealth, heredity, or personal magnetism to gain a position of influence. As seen by nation builders and development experts, the rural leader is tacitly pointed to as the key to success. It is he who can mobilise the people. It is through him that more energy will be expended, more muscles used, and more attitudes changed. Conversely, it is the leader's lack of initiative that will entrench the status quo and doom the modernisation schemes before they begin.
Wildlife, wild death: land use and survival in Eastern Africa
In: Suny series in environmental public policy
World Affairs Online
Village victories: New motivational techniques in Kenya and Zimbabwe
In: UFSI-Reports, (1983)13
The Institute of Cultural Affairs in Kenya and the Zimbabwe Project in Zimbabwe are organizations attempting to promote local-level development in their respective countries. ICA is more group-oriented than ZP, which works with Zimbabwean liberation war excombatants, but both rely heavily on motivational approaches
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Wild life - wild death: Kenya's man-animal equation
In: UFSI-Reports, (1982)1
African interests, particularly of peasant farmers, were not taken into account when formulating policies governing wildlife management. Herein lies the seed of wildlife destruction
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East Africa's new decade of doubt
In: Reports
Part 1: Kenya and Tanzania. - 17 S. - (Reports / American Universities Field Staff : Africa; 1980/No. 9); Part 2: Uganda and regional relations. - 11 S. - (Reports / American Universities Field Staff : Africa; 1980/No. 12)
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Food policy in Tanzania: issues of production, distribution, and sufficiency
In: UFSI Reports
In: Africa
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Habitat: the new United Nations initiative in human settlements
In: Reports, 1981/No. 28
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