The struggle for the state and the politics of belonging in contemporary Angola, 1975-2015
On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of Angola's independence, this essay revisits key dimensions of the country's postcolonial trajectory through the prism of the complex politics of the nationalist struggle and the first decades of self-rule. Its goal is to provide a series of reflect...
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Published in | Social dynamics Vol. 42; no. 1; pp. 69 - 84 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Abingdon
Routledge
02.01.2016
Taylor & Francis Ltd |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of Angola's independence, this essay revisits key dimensions of the country's postcolonial trajectory through the prism of the complex politics of the nationalist struggle and the first decades of self-rule. Its goal is to provide a series of reflections, mostly centred on the MPLA regime, rather than a comprehensive treatment of all political actors in Angolan politics of recent decades. It argues, firstly, that Angola's trajectory from independence to the end of the country's long civil war in 2002 was powerfully conditioned by the structural legacies of late colonialism, the associated intra-nationalist politics and the particular circumstances of the end of empire in 1975. To these legacies, the essay adds the (constrained, but real) choices made by Angolan decision-makers in terms of institutional consolidation, the management of the economy and state-society relations. Secondly, the essay outlines the extent to which the MPLA's 2002 victory against UNITA in the country's civil war did away with the fragmentation that had characterised Angolan politics since the 1960s. The clashing, indeed mutually exclusionary, nationalist projects that had jostled for control of the Angolan state were replaced by a would-be hegemonic political force with a strong sense of legitimacy and a self-defined project of postwar nation building. The key question for the contemporary study of Angola - and one that the oil-fuelled politics of the national reconstruction era provided plenty of reflection on - is the extent to which the MPLA's postwar vision can supersede the country's historical divisions and provide the population with both the material prosperity it yearns for and a shared understanding of belonging. |
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ISSN: | 0253-3952 1940-7874 |
DOI: | 10.1080/02533952.2016.1151108 |