The state of post-conflict reconstruction : land, urban development & state-building in Juba, Southern Sudan
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The state of post-conflict reconstruction : land, urban development & state-building in Juba, Southern Sudan
(Eastern Africa series)
James Currey, 2014
- : cloth
- Other Title
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The state of post-conflict reconstruction : land, urban development and state-building in Juba, Southern Sudan
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: clothFESD||321||S11922548
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 186-200) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Traces the dynamics of state-building in Juba, Southern Sudan 2005-2011, revealing how underlying ties of ethnicity and land dominated the actions of the various parties in post-conflict reconstruction and how these may continue to influence power and resource-sharing in the newly independent state of South Sudan.
Naseem Badiey examines the local dynamics of the emerging capital city of Juba, Southern Sudan, during the historically pivotal transition period following the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). Focusing on the intersections of land tenure reform and urban development, she challenges the dominant paradigm of 'post-conflict reconstruction' and re-conceptualizes state-building as a social process underpinned by negotiation. Badiey explores local resistance to reconstruction programmes, debates over the interpretation of peace settlements, and competing claims to land and resources not as problems to be solved through interventions but as negotiations of authority which are fundamental to shaping the character of the 'state'.
While donors and aid agency officials anticipated clashes between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) following the CPA, they did not foresee internal divisions that impeded reconstruction in Southern Sudan, raising serious questions about the viability of an independent state. In Juba local elites interpreted the CPA in line with their economic and political interests, using claims to land, authority and political power to challenge the SPLM's agenda for urban reconstruction. In revealing how local actors strategically interpreted the framework of land rights in Southern Sudan, the book offers a basis for understanding the challenges that confront the nascent South Sudan's state-builders and their international partners in the future.
NASEEM BADIEY is Assistant Professor of International Development andHumanitarian Action at California State University Monterey Bay.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The dilemma of 'post-conflict recontstruction' in South Sudan
The momemtum of history
'Rebels' and 'collaborators': integration and reconciliation following the CPA
'Land belongs to the community': competing interpretations of the CPA
The unseeing state: corruption, evasion and other responses to urban planning
Local land disputes: informality, autochthony and competing ideas of citizenship
Conclusion: all statebuilding is local
by "Nielsen BookData"