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Making War in Cote D´Ivoire
Mike Mcgovern
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Product Details
Publisher
C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Signed by the author
;Yes
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
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About Mike Mcgovern
MIKE MCGOVERN, who teaches anthropology at Yale University, was formerly Project Director in West Africa for the International Crisis Group.
Reviews for Making War in Cote D´Ivoire
'Cote d'Ivoire is rather little-known in the English-speaking world. This is surprising in view of the fact that for some two decades, from the mid-1960s onwards, it was considered one of the most economically successful countries in Africa. Since the 1990s, the shine has gone. From 2002 until recently (and even now the position remains precarious), the country was marked ... Read moreby a low-intensity war that was a volatile situation of neither peace nor war, or a mixture of both. ... There is no serious book in English on the Ivorian war. This is a gap that Mike McGovern, sets out to fill. ... He brings to his task a first-hand knowledge of leading actors in the Ivorian conflict and of some of the country's war zones, gained through academic and policy-oriented research.' - Professor Stephen Ellis, Free University of Amsterdam 'With the craft of an expert anthropologist who knows something about political science and sociology, Mike McGovern explains how local customs, burning political issues, and the economies of patronage and privilege fuel the politics of violence, showing how conflicts are made, not just how they happen.'-William Reno, Northwestern University 'A model for how to understand a mesmerising situation without reducing its complexity.'- Peter Geschiere, author of The Perils of Belonging - Autochthony, Citizenship and Exclusion in Africa and Europe 'Under the leadership of President Felix Houphouet-Boigny, who managed Cote d'Ivoire's transition to independence, the country was perceived as one of West Africa's few success stories, at least until the late 1980s. Domestic political stability and close relations with France aided steady growth in the economy, which was based on agricultural exports, most notably cocoa. By the time Houphouet-Boigny died, in 1993, the Ivoirian miracle had already been seriously tarnished after a collapse in cocoa prices. But few predicted the country's descent into ethnic polarization and civil conflict. McGovern demonstrates how ethnic identities became entrenched over the decades, as a result of the mass migration of northerners encouraged by the government to find work in southern cocoa-producing regions. When the economy stalled in the 1990s, politicians such as Laurent Gbagbo took advantage of the resentments generated by conflicts over land and social inequalities. McGovern skillfully unmasks the financial interests at stake in the country's politics: the cocoa sector continues to generate substantial revenues, which the state elite controls through an opaque web of public and semipublic organizations.' - Foreign Affairs Show Less