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Violent Politics and the Politics of Violence: The Dissolution of the Somali Nation-state

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Violent Politics and the Politics of Violence: The Dissolution of the Somali Nation-state
Author(s)Besteman, Catherine
AbstractSomalia was one of the first states to crumble in the post-cold war era. This article undresses the image of Somalia as the one true nation-state in Africa, arguing that the political economy of class and regional dynamics underscored the dissolution of the Somali nation-state and that the cultural construction of racial stratification configured the patterning of violence. Explaining Somalia’s dissolution is a contribution to the anthropological project of theorizing the global disintegration of nation-states.
IssueNo3
Pages579-596
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo23
PubDateAugust 1996
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496

War, Violence, and Hegemony

  • Ethnic Suppression and Genocide
  • Exploitation and Human Rights
  • Terrorism and War
  • Violence and Aggression


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