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Conference paper | Leiden University catalogue | WorldCat |
Title: | Forging two nations: insights on Sudan and South Sudan |
Editor: | Grawert, Elke |
Year: | 2013 |
Pages: | 269 |
Language: | English |
City of publisher: | Addis Ababa |
Publisher: | OSSREA |
ISBN: | 9789994455737 |
Geographic terms: | South Sudan Sudan |
Subjects: | political conditions independence gold mining informal settlements land conflicts development cooperation conflict resolution conference papers (form) 2012 |
Abstract: | Most of the papers in this book were presented during the 9th International South Sudan and Sudan Studies Conference of the Sudan Studies Association USA and the Sudan Studies Society UK, organized at Bonn University from 23 to 25 July 2012. The papers are arranged in four thematic sections: 1. Dispersed violence in the process of forging two nations; 2. Contested resources: common practices, means of exclusion; 3. Co-opted, side-lined, appropriated - or constructive? International assistance in Sudan and South Sudan; 4. Sudan and South Sudan: aspects of interdependence. Contributions: Sudan after South Sudan's independence: breaking up or holding together (Yasir Awad A. Eltahir); The changing nature of political activism in Sudan: women and youth 'activists' as catalysts in civil society (Sondra Hale & Gada Kadoda); 'Negotiating change': discourses, politics, and practices of Serau Village Youth Center in Omdurman, Sudan (Salma Mohamed Abdalla); Post-referendum South Sudan: political drivers of violence and the challenge of democratic nation-building (Christopher Zambakari); Gold mining concessions in Sudan's written laws, and practices of gold extraction in the Nuba Mountains (Enrico Ille & Sandra Calkins); Negotiations of power and responsibilities in Khartoum's shantytowns (Mohamed A.G. Bakhit); New forms of exclusion in Torit: contestation over urban land (Timm Sureau); The co-option of humanitarian assistance in Darfur (Elis Schmeer); How can development cooperation contribute to peaceful conflict resolution in South Sudan? (Elisabeth Hartwig & Tinega G. Ong'ondi); Post-war governance and the impact of international aid in South Sudan (Sarah Lykes Washburne); The challenge of increasing the security of the people in South Sudan (Marius Kahl); Is peace not for everyone? (Margret Verwijk); South Sudan in volatilities of sharing the Nile basin resources (Samson S. Wassara); Sudan and South Sudan in the East African Community: an option? (Dirk Hansohm). [ASC Leiden abstract] |