Preface
Part I. Citizenship and Political Conflict in Contemporary
Africa
1. Identity, Citizenship, and Nation Building in Africa
2. Theoretical and Formal-Legal Dimensions of the Concept of
Citizenship in Africa
3. Toward an Analytical Framework of Identity and Citizenship in
Africa
Part II. Identity Politics and Selected Cases in Conflict over
Citizenship Rights in Africa
4. Nigeria: Indigeneity and Citizenship
5. Ethiopia: The Politics of Late Nation Building and the National
Question
6. Côte d'Ivoire: Ivorité and Citizenship
7. Kenya: Citizenship, Land, and Ethnic Cleansing
8. Rwanda: Exclusionary Nationalism, Democracy, and Genocide
Summary and Conclusion: Identity, Citizenship, and Social
Conflict
Notes
References
Index
National identity and the project of nation-building
Edmond J. Keller is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is author of Revolutionary Ethiopia: From Empire to People's Republic (IUP, 1988) and "Trustee for the Human Community": Ralph Bunche and the Decolonization of Africa.
"Clear and lucid... Offers a promising design for careful comparative exploration of a core issue confronting contemporary Africa-the definition of citizenship as a legal and moral issue in a political environment where in most states ethnic attachment coexists with national identity." - M. Crawford Young, University of Wisconsin, Madison "By interrogating theories of citizenship and by looking at the citizenship question in Africa within a historical and comparative perspective, Edmond J. Keller enhances the debate on citizenship and democratization in political science in general, and with respect to African politics in particular." - Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
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