Escaping Africa's predatory trap: The social origins of development and democracy in Botswana and Mauritius.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Froitzheim ; John Lenard.
  • 学历:Doctor
  • 年:2009
  • 导师:Fatton, Robert,eadvisor
  • 毕业院校:University of Virginia
  • ISBN:9781109226188
  • CBH:3362826
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:5710644
  • Pages:355
文摘
This dissertation explores why two African states, Botswana and Mauritius, despite adverse initial conditions were able to escape the patterns of predation that characterize other African states and emerge as two of the most stable and prosperous states of Africa. By examining the origins and consequences of different institutional forms of state-society relationships, this dissertation explores the social origins of "developmental" states. I argue that both predatory and developmental states are a consequence of patterns of social conflict and cooperation over the distribution of political power and economic wealth, which shapes the profile of social institutions. These institutions structure the distribution of wealth and power through the legal and bureaucratic organs of the state and may enhance the hegemonic project of the ruling class. The ruling class's inherent predatory tendencies may be constrained by the relative power of social classes, the intensity of class struggles, and the constraints and opportunities inherent in pre-existing institutions. The constraints on the ruling class determine whether the ruling class will adopt predatory or developmental policies and institution building. International variables affect the relationship of power between social classes and thereby influence the distributional struggles between those groups. This dissertation examines the early origins of institutions in Botswana and Mauritius from their pre-colonial and colonial origins until January 2009. This dissertation pays special attention to constitutional negotiations prior to independence to examine how social groups sought to impose their preferences on the new political order and the nature of their compromises. It further examines how Botswana and Mauritius overcame initial handicaps after independence by building competent and capable bureaucracies, seizing opportunities in the global economy, and by mediating social conflicts through the institutions of the state. I argue that the economic development of Botswana and Mauritius and their democratic practices were largely shaped by the constraints on the ruling class, the inclusiveness of their political systems and the economic and social interests that shaped their developmental programs.

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