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Sovereignty and Underdevelopment: Juridical Statehood in the African Crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

When we speak of ‘the state’ in Tropical Africa today, we are apt to create an illusion. Ordinarily the term denotes an independent political structure of sufficient authority and power to govern a defined territory and its population: empirical statehood. This is the prevailing notion of the state in modern political, legal, and social theory1, and it is a fairly close approximation to historical fact in many parts of the world – not only in Europe and North America, where modern states first developed and are deeply rooted, but also in some countries of South America, the Middle East, and Asia, where they have more recently emerged. The state is an inescapable reality. The military credibility of Argentina during the Falklands war, when it was by no means certain that Britain would prevail against its air force, is an indication of the reality of the state in some parts of the Third World today.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1986

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References

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Page 16 note 5 It is too early to determine how long Zimbabwe will retain its 1980 independence constitution. Recent remarks by Prime Minister Robert Mugabe, and statements issued by the ruling party, suggest that it will be replaced by a new one-party constitution after 1990.

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Page 29 note 4 Almond and Coleman, op.cit. p. 4.

Page 30 note 1 Huntington, Samuel P., Political Order in Changing Societies (New Haven and London, 1968), p. 12.Google Scholar

Page 30 note 2 The term ‘political system’ was particularly appropriate to anthropologists precisely because their objects of analysis were lacking in the specific institutional characteristics — sovereignty, international law, etcetera — of states. The comments of Radcliffe-Brown, A. R. on this point are quite explicit in Meyer Fortes and Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (eds.), African Political Systems (London, 1940), p. xxi.Google Scholar

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