Intimate Encounters with the State in Post-War Luanda, Angola
Chloé Buire
Journal of Development Studies, 2018, vol. 54, issue 12, 2210-2226
Abstract:
Since the end of the war in 2002, Luanda has become an iconic site of urban transformation in the context of a particularly entrenched oligarchic regime. In practice however, urban dwellers are often confronted with a ‘deregulated system’ that fails to advance a coherent developmental agenda. The paper narrates the trajectory of a family forcibly removed from the old city to the periphery. It shows how city-dwellers experience the control of the party-state through a series of encounters with authority across the city. Questioning the intentionality of a state that appears at the same time omnipotent and elusive, openly violent and subtly hegemonic, the paper reveals the fine mechanisms through which consent is fabricated in the intimacy of the family.
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:jdevst:v:54:y:2018:i:12:p:2210-2226
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DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2018.1460467
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