State and Society in Contemporary Africa
calendar_month 29 Iul 2015, 00:00
Narratives of the State in Africa since the late 1980s have been dominated by images of institutional %E2%80%98fragility%E2%80%99, lack of legitimacy, if not outright %E2%80%98collapse%E2%80%99 and %E2%80%98failure%E2%80%99. For some, the purportedly %E2%80%98imported%E2%80%99 character of the State in Africa is the main cause of its structural weakness. For others, the generalisation of violent conflicts in the continent, especially in the 1990s, widespread corruption and %E2%80%98bad governance were signs of the incapacity of African States to fulfil their role and their consequent vacuity. Echoing such %E2%80%98Afro-pessimistic%E2%80%99 feelings, the Economist thus labelled Africa the %E2%80%98hopeless continent%E2%80%99 in its May 11th 2000 edition. Recently however, unprecedented economic growth rates in many parts of the continent,fuelled in large part by high prices of raw materials on the international markets and the mineral-hungry economies of China and other emerging powers, as well as the development of an %E2%80%98African middle class%E2%80%99, the spectacular growth of African cities and the new scramble for African land have given rise to other narratives where Africa has moved from being %E2%80%98hopeless%E2%80%99 to one of the new frontiers of global capitalism.
Course leader
Course director: Dr. Didier PclardFaculty: Professors from the University of Geneva and guest scholars from Africa, Europe and North America
Target group
Upper year undergraduates and MA students
Course aim
With this course, students will be brought to critically reflect on such narratives. The course concentrates on the historicity of state formation processes in Africa and looks at how African states have developed as the dynamic product of internal and external influences and in close interaction with their own societies. Interdisciplinary in nature, the course will look at the following topics:- From state failure to 'Africa rising': understanding recent changes in African states and economies;- The longue dure of the African State: from precolonial State formations to decolonization;- War and state formation in Africa;- New territorialities of power: the changing geography of state-society relations;- Economic growth vs. social development: making sense of the current boom.
Credits info
3 ECTS Credits for this course under review. Please refer to course web page for most up to date information.Each summer school will indicate its equivalence in ECTS credits in its description. Participants will be provided with a Certificate of Completion of the course if they satisfy attendance and evaluation requirements. It is the participant's responsibility to verify the validity of the course and validate it at their home university prior to participating in the course.
Fee info
CHF 2000: Tuition fees do not include housing or accommodation.
Scholarships
A limited number of competitive excellence scholarshipsa are available.
University of Geneva
Address: Blvd du Pont d%5C'Arve 40 R 050
Postal code: CH-1211 Geneva 4
City: Geneva
Country: Switzerland
Website: http://genevasummerschools.ch/
E-mail: gss@unige.ch
Phone: +41 22 379 80 90