Front MatterSource: The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 32, No. 2 (Jun., 1994)Published by: Cambridge University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/161766 .
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THE JOURNAL OF
MO DERN
AFRICAN
VOLUME 32 NUMBER 2
PAUL KENNEDY Political Barriers to African Capitalism
OKECHUKWU C. IHEDURU The State and Maritime Nationalism in
S|*L-. \ *fl|_ Cute d'voire
CRAWFORD YOUNG Zaire: the Shattered Illusion of the Integral State
ANTHONY G. PAZZANITA Morocco versus Polisario: a Political Interpretation
DAVID E. SAHN & ALEXANDER SARRIS The Evolution of States, Markets, and Civil Institutions in RuralAfrica
JUDE HOWELL The End of an Era: the Rise and Fall of G.D.R. Aid
JOSEF GUGLER How Ngugfwa Thiong'o Shifted from Class Analysis to a Neo-Colonialist Perspective
REVIEWS
A QUARTERLY SURVEY OF POLITICS, ECONOMICS
& RELATED TOPICS IN CONTEMPORARY AFRICA
EDITED BY DAVID KIMBLE
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD
PROFESSOR G. BALANDIER, Universitm de Paris SIR KENNETH BERRILL, London DR S. 0. BIOBAKU, University of Ibadan DR B. T. G. CHIDZERO, Harare, Zimbabwe JOHN HO LM ES, Canadian Institute of International Affairs, Toronto HELEN KIMBLE, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford University PROFESSOR C. T. LEYS, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario DR ABDOULAYE Ly, I.F.A.N., Uniersity of Dakar T1AIEB SLIM, Tunis DR V. G. SOLODOVNIKOV, Africa Institute, Academy of Sciences, Moscow
CONTRI BUTIONS
Contributions are invited from all over the world, and especially from scholars working in African universities. Articles written in languages other than English will be considered on their merits, and where necessary translation will be arranged. The average length suggested is 5,000 to 7,000 words, with occasional exceptions of up to io,ooo words. Initially, one copy should be submitted, and not the original typescript.
All correspondence and contributions should be addressed to
DR DAVID KIMBLE, Editor of the J.M.A.S., HUISH, CHAGFORD, DEVON
TQI3 8AR, ENGLAND.
Each contributor will receive a copy of the number and 25 oflprints of his/her article free of charge.
Contributors to this journal express their own opinions, which should not be inter- preted as the official view of any institution or organisation with which they may be connected.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
The Journal of Modern African Studies (ISSN: 0022-278x) is published quarterly by Cambridge University Press, The Edinburgh Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU; Journals Department, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY
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THE JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES
VOLUME 32 JUNE 1994 NUMBER 2
ARTICLES
POLITICAL BARRIERS TO AFRICAN CAPITALISM DR PA U L KENNED Y, Senior Lecturer in Social Science, Manchester
Metropolitan University 191
THE STATE AND MARITIME NATIONALISM IN COTE D'IVOIRE
DR OKECHUKWU C. IHEDURU, Assistant Professor of International Relations, James Madison College, Michigan State University, East Lansing 215
ZAIRE: THE SHATTERED ILLUSION OF THE INTEGRAL STATE
DR C RAW FORD YoU N G, Professor of Political Science, College of Letters and Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison 247
MOROCCO VERSUS POLISARIO: A POLITICAL INTERPRETATION
ANTHONY G. PAZZANITA, 44 Oakridge Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts o2181 265
THE EVOLUTION OF STATES, MARKETS, AND CIVIL INSTITUTIONS IN RURAL AFRICA
DR DAVID E. SAHN, Associate Professor of Economics and Director of Cornell Food and Nutrition Policy Program, Ithaca, NY, and DR ALEXANDER SARRIS, Senior Research Fellow of C.F.N.P.P. and Professor of Economics at the University of Athens, Greece 279
THE END OF AN ERA: THE RISE AND FALL OF G.D.R. AID
D R JUDE H OWE L L, Lecturer in Development Studies, University of East Anglia, Norwich 305
HOW NGUGI WA THIONG'O SHIFTED FROM CLASS ANALYSIS TO A NEO-COLONIALIST PERSPECTIVE
DR JOSEF GUGLER, Professor of Sociology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 329
REVIEWS
Population Movements and the Third World by M I K E P A R N W E L L D R M O N I C A K. N Y A M W A N G E, Department of Geography, East Stroudsburg
University, Pennsylvania 341
The Politics of Africa's Economic Recovery by RI C H A RD SA ND B RO O K RoTI MI AJ A Y i, Department of Political Science, University of Ilorin, currently Fulbright
Visiting Fellow, Department of Government, University of Texas at Austin 342
Small Enterprises and Changing Policies: structural adjustment, financial policy and assistance programmes in Africa edited by A. H.J. HELMSING and THEO KOLSTEE
MINDY MILLER, World Vision International, B.P. 5I, Thies, Senegal 345
7 MOA 32
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Public Enterprise in Kenya: what works, what doesn't, and why by BARBARA GROSH
DR KARAMO N. M. SONKO, Socio-Economic Research and Planning Division, U.N. Economic Commission for Africa, Addis Ababa 347
Government and Change in Lesotho, i800-i966: a study of political institutions by L. B. B. J. MACHOBANE
D R E L I Z A B E T H A. E L D R E D G E, Department of History, Michigan State University, East Lansing 349
Constitutional Developments in the Post-Colonial State of Sierra Leone, i96i-I984 by SHEIKH
BATU DARAMY
DR ALUSINE JALLOiH, Department of History, University of Texas at Arlington 352
The State and the Provision of Social Services in Sierra Leone since Independence, i96i-gi edited by C. MAGBAILY FYLE
D R E M M A N U E L C L E E V E, Department of Economics and Economic History, Manchester Metropolitan University 353
Labour Resistance in Cameroon: managerial strategies and labour resistance in the agro-industrial plantations of the Cameroon Development Corporation by PIE T KO N IN GS
Power and Privilege in the Administration of Law: land law reforms and social differentiation in Cameroon by CYPRIAN F. FISIY
DR JEAN-EMMANUEL PONDI, International Relations Institute of Cameroon, Yaounde, currently at the Centre of International Studies, Cambridge University 356
Forestry in Namibia, i85-1iggo by ANTTI ERKKILA and HARRI SIISKONEN
Whose Trees? A People's View of Forestry Aid by MOHAMED AHMED HIS HAM, JAN SHARMA and ANTHONY NGAIZA with NICHOLAS ATAMPUGRE
ToB IAS J. LAN Z, Department of Government and International Studies, University of South Carolina, Columbia 358
Reporting South Africa by RI C H M K H O ND O DR PAUL-HENRI BISCHOFF, Department of Political and Administrative Studies,
University of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby 361
Towards the Abolition of Whiteness: essays on race, politics, and working class history by DAVID R. ROEDIGER
P R O F E S S O R M I C H A E L J. C. E C H E R U O, Department of English, Syracuse University, New York 364
Hausa Folktales from Niger translated and edited by ROBERT S. GLEW and CHAIBOU
BABALE
DR MI C H A E L P E Y NI N OK U, Department of Languages and Linguistics, University of Maiduguri, Nigeria 367
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