POLI-3313 FA: African Politics Fall 2014

Similar documents
POLI-3313 FA: African Politics Course Outline

POLI-3313 FA: Third World Area Studies: African Politics (Fall 2012) Time: Tues. & Thurs.: 10:00-11:30am; Place: RB 1042

POLI-4555 WA: Politics of Public Policy (Winter 2013) Wednesdays: 2:30 5:30 pm; RB 2026

IAS 3003: African Politics and Society Department of International and Area Studies University of Oklahoma Fall 2017

Graduate Seminar John Comaroff University of Chicago. Legal Anthropology: Advanced Seminar

François-Xavier Plasse-Couture.

POLS 360 (390) Africa & World Politics COURSE OBJECTIVES

Lakehead University Contemporary Political Thought (2012) POLI-4513-FA T 11:30-2:30 Ryan Building 2026

POLS Global Political Theory Spring 2009 MWF 12-12:50pm Maybank 307 Dr. Kea Gorden

H509: Fascism in Europe,

Lakehead University Department of Political Science. Political Science 4110 FA Research Methodology Fall 2010

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 205: INTRODUCTION TO EUROPEAN STUDIES

UCLA DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE POLITICAL SCIENCE 151A: GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS OF AFRICA

POLS ST: Feminist Theories of International Development Course Description and Learning Objectives Course Requirements:

INTL NATIONALISM AND CITIZENSHIP IN EUROPE

ANTH 231 Crime in Latin America (Syllabus is subject to change. Check Moodle for latest version) Tues / Thurs 10:10 11:30a HEG 201

Geography 320H1 Geographies of Transnationalism, Migration, and Gender Fall Term, 2015

Course Objectives: 1) To understand the relationship between religion and immigration in U.S. history and society

SYP Page 1 of 6 SYP Development and Post-Development. SIPA SIPA 503 SIPA 330. Course Description

The U.S. Congress Syllabus

POSC 6100 Political Philosophy

University of California, San Diego Winter Quarter, Monday 8:30-9:30. Other times to meet can be arranged upon request.

1. Introduce students to global political, economic and cultural issues.

POLI 140C: Latin American Politics 2016 Summer Session II Monday/Wednesday 1:00-4:30pm Physical Sciences Building 140

Law or Politics? The U.S. Supreme Court and the Meaning of the Constitution

Cultural Sociology - Compulsory course Graduate Study in Sociology Optional course Year 2 Semester 1 ECTS credits 5 dr. Biljana Kašić, full professor

SYA 4011 AFA 4930 POSTCOLONIAL THEORY Spring 2018

PHIL : Social and Political Philosophy , Term 1: M/W/F: 12-1pm in DMP 301 Instructor: Kelin Emmett

Political Science 9567B Comparative Politics II The University of Western Ontario 2013

Course Outline. LAWS 3908C Legal Studies Methods and Theory II

Human Rights and Social Justice

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

The American Legislature PLS Fall 2008

Grading & Best Practices

POLI-4615-WA: Global Political Economy Course Outline. Winter 2014

PPD 270 Ethics and Public Policy Focus on the Environment

POL 10a: Introduction to Political Theory Spring 2017 Room: Golding 101 T, Th 2:00 3:20 PM

Study program Sociology SOCIOLOGY OF IDENTITY Graduate level

Cultural Sociology - Compulsory course Graduate Study in Sociology Optional course Year 2 Semester 1 ECTS credits 5 dr. Biljana Kašić, full professor

Introduction to Mexican American Policy Studies MAS 308 Unique Number: Fall 2011 University of Texas at Austin

CIEE Global Institute Berlin

CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics (Honors)

Optional Course Text: Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty! (New York: W.W. Norton) Any edition works.

Orsi, Robert A. (1985). The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem, New Haven: Yale University Press.

SYLLABUS AMERICAN GOVERNMENT I [POSC 1113]

Yale University Department of Political Science

Carleton University Fall 2009 Department of Political Science

INTERNAL WAR AND THE STATE

JINAN UNIVERSITY World History

Introduction to Contentious Politics Political Science/International Studies 667 Fall 2015 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:15-3:30

University of Montana Department of Political Science

THEORIES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: FROM SMITH TO SACHS MORSE ACADEMIC PLAN TEXTS AND IDEAS. 53 Washington Square South

Introduction to Political Thought POLS (CRN 21155), Spring 2019 MW 2:00-3: Maybank Hall Instructor: David Hinton

UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT, SPRING 2015 HISTORY 3753 MODERN AFRICA

POL 168: Chicano/Latino Politics Fall 2011 Lecture: T-Th 1:40 3:00, Olson 118

July 2016 Assistant Professor of Political Science, Singapore Management University, School of Social Science

Sociology 3410: Early Sociological Theory Fall, Class Location: RB 2044 Office: Ryan Building 2034

American National Government Spring 2008 PLS

BOSTON UNIVERSITY. CHINA: FROM REVOLUTION TO REFORM CAS IR 370/PO 369 Semester I 2007/2008 Mon., Weds., Fri.: 10:00-11:00 CAS 116

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

Social Forces, States and the Production of Neoliberal Capitalism POLS Wednesday 17:00 19:25

Course Syllabus Spring 2015 FLL 470: Multiculturism in Literature and Film

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW CAS IR 306

The programme, the team, the modules. Time for questions. BA International Development (ID)

When I was fourteen years old, I spent a week during the summer in Chicago s Englewood

Required Text Bale, Tim European Politics: A Comparative Introduction (4 th edition) New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Senegal: Colonialism, the State and Society AFRS 3000 (3 Credits / 45 hours)

World Politics. Seminar Instructor: Pauline Brücker Academic Year: 2016/2017 Spring Semester

Temple University Department of Political Science. Political Science 3102: The Legislative Process. Spring 2015 Semester

Lahore University of Management Sciences. POL 131 Introduction to International Relations Fall

GETTYSBURG COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. ECON 308 Fall 2009 M 01:10-03:40 PM Glatfelter 104

Federica Carugati. Stanford University, Stanford, CA Program Director, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (2018-present)

POSC 4100 Approaches to Political Theory

GOV 312P (38645) Constitutional Principles: Core Texts

SOCIAL SCIENCE. I Term Units Topics Marks. I India and the Contemporary World - I 23. II Contemporary India - I 23. III Democratic Politics - I 22

Available through a partnership with

The political economy of African development Syllabus

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

Note: Principal version Equivalence list Modification Complete version from 1 October 2014 Master s Programme Sociology: Social and Political Theory

Winter 2006 Political Science 2004: Politics and Violence in the Middle East University of Missouri at Columbia

Lahore University of Management Sciences. POL 131 Introduction to International Relations Fall

Migration, Citizenship, and the City

LSE-UCT July School 2018 LCS-DV202: Poverty and Development

Fodei J. Batty. Department of Political Science Kalamazoo, MI Office: 3458 Friedmann Hall

Agendas: Research To Policy on Arab Families. An Arab Families Working Group Brief

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Peace, Conflict, Security, and Development

Democracy and economic development

Miracle Obeta, M.A. Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Reviewed

Class Times: TTH 2:00-3:30 Meeting Place: PAR 203

HOWARD UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE. POLS 218 Public Policy Formulation Instructor: Dr.

Political Science (PSCI)

Political Movements. Normally Level 4 Politics modules

Political Science 103 Fall, 2015 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

SOSC 5170 Qualitative Research Methodology

Classics of Political Economy POLS 1415 Spring 2013

Political Science 362 Nationalism and Nation-Building State University of New York at Albany Spring 2016

LECT 01 W 8: TEL 0014 Glenn Goshulak

PO102, R: Introduction to Comparative Politics Dwight R. Hahn, Ph.D.

University of Florida Spring 2017 CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY SYA 6126, Section 1F83

Transcription:

POLI-3313 FA: African Politics Fall 2014 Time: Wednesdays & Fridays: 8:30-10:00 a.m. Place: UC 2011 Instructor: Zubairu Wai Office: RB 2041 Hours: Wednesdays 12:30-2:30 p.m. (or by appointment) Email: zubawai@lakeheadu.ca Course Description In mainstream discourses, Africa is a disaster story; a homogenised and undifferentiated state inhabited by primitive tribes where a tragic human history stands revealed. A land of crisis and failure, this Africa is constantly depicted as a moral challenge to the West, and a basket-case needing the redemptive power of Western modernist intervention. Do these broadstroke stereotypical generalisations represent the African reality, or do they obscure the historical realities of political and social life on the continent? What kind of place is Africa? How do we understand its social and political formations? Does Africa have any meaningful political life? How do we explain the continent s social and political realities? The aim of this course is to move beyond these problematic stereotypical representations and crass journalistic accounts by providing a broad and critical introduction to African political life. It seeks to explore African politics from a broader socio-historical perspective focusing on the processes out of which the continent s present day reality emerged. Seeking to understand Africa differently away from the problematic discourses which tend to obscure the epistemological, power/political and material processes that have historically defined the continent s experience in a world characterised by unequal power relations, this course interrogates the dominant ways we have come to understand Africa and raises important questions about power and politics, war and violence, epistemology and ethics, identity and subjectivities from a postcolonial and critical political economy perspectives. At the heart of the course is a simple but fundamental question: What is Africa and what is its place in the world? Required Texts: Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart; a novel (London: Heinemann, 1958) POLI-3313 Course Kit Course Requirements and Evaluation The method of instruction will be lectures and class discussions. Students are required to regularly attend classes; do the assigned readings before coming to class; take part in class discussions; and complete the required assignments for the course. 1

The final grade will be weighted as follows: Attendance & Participation: 20% Map Quiz: 20% Book Review: 25% Final Essay: 35% 1. Attendance & Participation (worth 20% of the final grade): Attendance and participation are crucial for the success of the course. Students are required to regularly attend classes, do the assigned readings before coming to class and take part in class discussions. A register of attendance will be kept throughout the duration of the course. 2. Map Quiz (worth 20% of the final grade): The map quiz is intended to test your map literacy and knowledge on Africa s political geography. It will mainly involve correctly identifying the countries of the continent, their capitals and general demographic features. The quiz will take place in class on 17 October. 3. Book Review (worth 25% of the final grade): The focus of the book review is to critically review one African novel (from the list provided below), bringing out its political significance and demonstrating how it helps us in understanding contemporary African political life. It is an opportunity for linking the fictionalised rendition of African political life in novels with the realities of contemporary African politics. It is also a way of getting students to acquire the skills of undertaking academic reviews of texts. The review should be 5 double-spaced pages long, on one of the following novels: 1. Aminatta Forna, The Devil that Danced on Water: A Daughter s Memoir (London: Flamingo 2003) 2. Ngugi wa Thiong o, A Grain of Wheat (London: Heinemann, 1967) 3. Mongo Beti, The Poor Christ of Bomba (London: Heinemann, 1971) 4. Chinua Achebe, Anthills of the Savannah (London: Heinemann, 1987) 5. Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche, Half of a Yellow Sun (London: Harper Perennial, 2007) 6. Uzodinma Iweala, Beasts of No Nation (New York: Harper Perennial, 2005) 7. Chinua Achebe, A Man of the People (London: Heinemann, 1966) 8. Mariam Ba, So Long a Letter (London: Heinemann, 1989) 9. Ayi Kwei Armah, The Beautyful Ones are Not Yet Born (London: Heinemann, 1968) 10. Tsitsi Dangarembga, Nervous Conditions (London: The Women s Press, 1988) If you are interested in reviewing a novel that is not listed, you must first clear it with me otherwise you will be penalised. 2

4. Final Paper (worth 35% of the final grade): The final paper is a research essay intended to test your knowledge on African politics. It can be on any topic in African politics. The paper provides an opportunity for students to research an issue in African politics that is topical and important to them. The essay should be between 10 and 12 double-spaced pages (not including the title page and bibliography of works cited). It should be handed in class on Wednesday December 1, that is, the last day of lectures for the course. Note: All essays should have a title page indicating name, student number, course numbers, and the name of the instructor, the department and the university. The essays should be doubled-spaced, Times New Roman 12 point fonts, 1 inch margin and should be handed in on the due date in class. Barring any extenuating circumstance, all written assignments must be submitted on time, otherwise a 2 per cent per day penalty will apply each day the essay is late. Please refer to and use the Chicago-Style of citation for all written work. Students with Special Needs Students with special needs can request accommodations in accordance with the Senate Policy on Students with Disabilities. Please endeavour, at the earliest opportunity, to advice the Student Accessibility Services (formerly the Learning Assistance Centre) and the course instructor of your special needs so that appropriate arrangements can be made to accommodate such needs. Those who encounter extenuating circumstances which may interfere with the successful completion of the course should, as soon as possible, discuss these circumstances with the course instructor and the Student Accessibility Services. Lakehead Policy on Academic Dishonesty As academic integrity is crucial to the pursuit of university education, students are expected to uphold the academic honour code at all times and are advised to familiarise themselves with the university s policy on academic dishonesty, especially in relation, but not limited to, plagiarism, cheating, impersonation etc. In order to make sure that a degree awarded by Lakehead University is a reflection of the honest efforts and individual academic achievement of each student, Lakehead University treats cases of academic dishonesty very seriously and severely penalises those caught in violation of the university s policy on academic dishonesty. Course Schedule Week 1 (Sept. 10 & 12): Introduction to the Course: Thinking about African Politics Jack Parson, Tarzan, Tim Russert and Me: Teaching about Africa in the United States. Southeastern Regional Seminar in African Studies (SERSAS), 26-27 March, 2004. http://www.ecu.edu/african/sersas/papers/parsonspring2004.htm 3

Mahmood Mamdani, Is African Studies to be turned into a New Home for Bantu Education at UCT? Remarks at the Seminar on Teaching Africa in Post- Apartheid South Africa, University of Cape Town, April 22, 1998. http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/30/136.html Binyavanga Wainaina, How to Write about Africa, Granta 92, (2005): http://www.granta.com/archive/92/how-to-write-about-africa/page-1 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The Danger of a Single Story (TED Video): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9ihs241zeg Week 2 (Sept. 17 & 19): Africanism and the Knowledge Question V.Y. Mudimbe, Discourse of Power and Knowledge of Otherness. Chapter 1 in his The Invention of Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy and the Order of Knowledge (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1988), pp. 1 23 Achille Mbembe, Time on the Move. Introduction to his On the Postcolony (Berkley, CA: University of California Press, 2001), pp. 1 23 Zubairu Wai, Evolutionism and the Africanist Project Chapter 1 in his Epistemologies of African Conflicts: Violence, Evolutionism and the War in Sierra Leone (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), pp. 1 58 Oyekan Owomoyela, With Friends like These A Critique of Pervasive Anti- Africanisms in Current African Studies Epistemology and Methodology, African Studies Review 37, no. 3 (1994), pp. 77-101 [Note: 19 September is the Final Date of Registration] Week 3 (Sept. 24 & 26): The Legacies of Colonialism Required A. Adu Boahen (ed.) Africa and the Colonial Challenge and European Partition and Conquest of Africa: an Overview in UNESCO General History of Africa: Vol. VII Africa under Colonial Domination 1880 1935 [Abridged edition] (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, for UNESCO, 1990), pp. 1 24 Mahmood Mamdani, Decentralized Despotism. Chapter 2 in his Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996), pp. 37 61 Achille Mbembe, Of Commandement. Chapter 1 in his On the Postcolony (Berkley, CA: University of California Press, 2001), pp. 24-65 4

Walter Rodney, Colonialism as a System for Underdeveloping Africa, Chapter 6 in his How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press 1972) Week 4 (Oct. 1 & 3): The State in Africa Required Richard Dowden, The state of the African state, New Economy 11, no 3 (2004), pp.138-143 Goran Hyden, The Problematic State, Chapter 3 in his African Politics in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), pp. 50-71 Patrick Chabal and Jean-Pascal Daloz, Whither the State, Chapter 1 in their Africa Works: Disorder as Political Instrument (Oxford and Bloomington & Indianapolis: James Currey and Indiana University Press, 1999), pp. 3-16 Zubairu Wai, Neo-Patrimonialism and the Discourse of State Failure in Africa, Review of African Political Economy 39, no. 131 (2012), pp. 27 43 Week 5 (Oct. 8 & 10): The Political Economy of Development and Developmentalism Required Paul T. Zeleza, Colonial Developmentalism in his Manufacturing African Studies and Crises (Dakar: CODESRIA 1997), pp. 218 240. Frederick Cooper, Development and Disappointment: Social and Economic Change in an Unequal World, 1945-2000 Chapter 5 in his Africa Since 1940: the Past and the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), pp. 91-132 Zubairu Wai, Whither African Development? A Preparatory for an African Alternative Reformulation of the Concept of Development, Africa Development 32, no. 4, (2007), pp.71 98 Thandika Mkandawire, Thinking about Developmental States in Africa, Cambridge Journal of Economics 25, no. 3 (2001), pp. 289-313 Week 6 (Oct. 15 & 17): Democracy and Democratisation Richard Joseph, Democratisation in Africa, After 1989: Comparative and Theoretical Perspectives, Comparative Politics 29, no. 4 (1997), pp. 363 82 John S. Saul, For Fear of Being Condemned as Old Fashioned : Liberal Democracy vs. Popular Democracy in Africa, Review of African Political Economy 24, no. 73 (1997), pp. 339-353 5

Zubairu Wai, Elections as a Strategy for democratisation and Conflict Transformation? Liberal Peace and the 1996 Elections in Sierra Leone, African Journal of Political Science and International Relations 5, no. 4, (2011) pp. 112 129 Issa Shivji, Democracy and Democratisation in Africa: Interrogating paradigms and practices, Pambazuka, Issue 560, (November 30, 2011); http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/78361 [Note: Map Quiz on Friday 17 October in class] Week 7 (Oct. 22 & 24): Interrogating Gender Required Chandra T. Mohanty, Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses, Feminist Review 30 (1988), pp. 61 88 Oyeronke Oyewumi, Visualizing the Body: Western Theories and African Subjects Chapter 1 in her The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses (University of Minnesota Press, 1997) Obioma Nnaemeka, Bringing African Women into the Classroom: Rethinking Pedagogy and Epistemology, in African Gender Studies: A Reader, edited by Oyeronke Oyewumi (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), pp. 51-65 Amina Mama: Challenging Subjects: Gender Power in African Subjects, African Sociological Review 5, no. 2 (2001) Week 8 (October 29 & 31): The Politics of Ethnicity Required Jean-Francois Bayart, The Shadow Theatre of Ethnicity in his The State in Africa: The Politics of the Belly 2e (London: Polity: 2009), pp. 41-59 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong o, The Myth of Tribe in African Politics, Transition 101, (2009), pp. 16-23 Archie Mafeje, The Ideology of Tribalism, The Journal of Modern African Studies 9, no. 2, (1971), pp. 253-261 Carola Lentz, Tribalism and Ethnicity in Africa: A Review of Four Decades of Anglophone Research, Cahiers des Sciences Humaines 31, no. 2 (1995), pp. 303-28 [Note: Book Review due in class on Friday October 31. Also note that November 4 is the Final Date for Withdrawal from the course without Academic Penalty] 6

Week 9 (Nov. 5 & 7): Discourse of Violence, Armed Conflicts and Civil Wars Zubairu Wai, On the Banality of Violence: State, Power and the Everyday in Africa In Violence in/and the Great Lakes: the Thought of V.Y. Mudimbe and Beyond, edited by Grant Farred, Leonhard Praeg and Kaseraka Kavwahirehi (Natal: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press, 2014), pp. 128-160 Paul Richards, New War: An Ethnographic Approach in No Peace No War: Anthropology of Contemporary Armed Conflicts, Paul Richards edited. (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press); 1 21. Neil Cooper, Picking the Pieces of the Liberal Peaces: Representations of Conflict Economies and the Implication for Policy. Security and Dialogue 36, no. 4 (2005); 463 478 Christopher Cramer, Homo Economicus Goes to War: Methodological Individualism, Rational Choice and the Political Economy of War, World Development 30, no. 2, (2002): 1845 1864 Week 10 (Nov. 12 & 14): Social Movements and Political Change Miles Larmer, Social Movement Struggles in Africa, Review of African Political Economy 37, no.125 (2010), pp. 251-262 Marion Dixon, An Arab Spring, Review of African Political Economy 38, no.128 (2011), pp. 309-316 Habib Ayeb, Social and Political Geography of the Tunisian Revolution: the Alfa Grass Revolution, Review of African Political Economy 38, no. 129 (2011), pp. 467-479 Angela Joya, The Egyptian Revolution: Crisis of Neoliberalism and the Potential for Democratic Politics, Review of African Political Economy 38, no. 129 (2011), pp. 367-386 Week 11 (Nov. 19 & 21): Land Grabbing and the New Scramble for Africa Ray Bush, Janet Bujra & Gary Littlejohn, The Accumulation of Dispossession, Review of African Political Economy 38, no.128, (2011), pp. 187-192 Saturnino M. Borras Jr., et. al Towards a better understanding of global land grabbing: an editorial introduction, Journal of Peasant Studies 38, no. 2 (2011), pp. 209-216 7

Bikrum Gill, Can the River Speak? Epistemological Confrontation in the Rise and Fall of the Land Grab in Ethiopia Paper presented at Summer Institute on Contested Global Landscapes, Cornell University, May 2014. Tania Murray Li, Centring Labour in the Land Grab Debate, Journal of Peasant Studies 38, no.2 (2011), pp. 281-298 Week 12 (Nov. 26 & 28): Africa and the World Required James Ferguson, Introduction to his Global Shadows: Africa in the Neoliberal World Order (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006), pp. 1 23 Jean and John L. Comaroff, Theory from the South Chapter 1 in their Theory from the South, or How Euro-America is Evolving Toward Africa (London: Paradigm Publishers, 2012), pp. 1-49 Zubairu Wai, Empire s New Clothes: Africa, Liberal Interventionism and Contemporary World Order Review of African Political Economy 41, no. 142, (2014) 1 17 Denis M. Tull, China s Engagement in Africa: Scope, Significance, and Consequences Journal of Modern African Studies, 44, no. 3 (2006), pp. 459 479 [Note: Final paper due at the end of class on 28 November 2014] (Examination Period: 4 17 December, 2014. There will be no exam for this course). 8