Tribes without rulers : studies in African segmentary systems
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Tribes without rulers : studies in African segmentary systems
(Routledge library editions, Anthropology and ethnography)
Routledge, 2004
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Note
Originally published: London: Routledge & Paul, 1958
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Recent research in Africa has shown a wide range of political systems, from small societies of wandering hunters to large states of several million people comparable with mediaeval European feudal kingdoms. In between are many societies in which a central government is lacking; the political system is based upon a balance of power between many small groups, which with their lack of classes or specialized political offices, have been called 'ordered anarchies'.
First published in 1958.
Table of Contents
1. John Middleton and David Tait, Introduction2. Laura Bohannan, Political Aspects of Tiv Social Organization3. Jean Buxton, The Mandari of the Southern Sudan4. Godfrey Lienhardt, The Western Dinka5. Edward Winter, The Aboriginal Political Structure of Bwamba6. David Tait, The Territorial Pattern and Lineage System of Konkomba7. John Middleton, The Political System of the Lugbara of the Nile-Congo Divide
by "Nielsen BookData"