The Nordic Africa Institute – Publications

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  • 101.
    Udelsmann Rodrigues, Cristina
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Precarity in Angolan diamond mining towns, 1920–2014: tracing agency of the state, mining companies and urban households2018In: Journal of Modern African Studies, ISSN 0022-278X, E-ISSN 1469-7777, Vol. 56, no 1, p. 113-141Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    After nearly 30 years of civil war, Angola gained peace in 2002. The country’s diamond and oil wealth affords the national government the means to pursue economic reconstruction and urban development. However, in the diamond-producing region of Lunda Sul, where intense fighting between MPLA and UNITA forces was waged, the legacy of war lingers on in the form of livelihood uncertainty and uneven access to the benefits of the state’s urban development programmes. There are three main interactive agents of urban change: the Angolan state, the mining corporations, and not least urban residents. The period has been one of shifting alignments of responsibility for urban housing, livelihoods and welfare provisioning. Beyond the pressures of post-war adjustment, the wider context of global capital investment and labour market restructuring has introduced a new surge of corporate mining investment and differentiated patterns of prosperity and precarity in Lunda Sul.

  • 102.
    Udelsmann Rodrigues, Cristina
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Private condominiums in Luanda: more than just the safety of walls, a new way of living2018In: Social Dynamics, ISSN 0253-3952, E-ISSN 1940-7874, Vol. 44, no 2, p. 341-358Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Since its independence in 1975, Angola’s capital Luanda has beengoing through deep processes of demographic, economic, socialand physical transformations. In this article, apart from introducing the case study of private condominiums in the general discussion on urban studies in the Global South, we focus on the dynamics of transformations regarding housing for the mid/upper strata, providing the background for the emergence and recent expansion ofgated communities/condominiums, a phenomenon that has acquired major importance in the recent decades in Luanda. The specialised literature relates the demand for and multiplication of these residential structures in Africa with issues such as the search for safety associated with demonstrations of exclusive lifestyles. In the case of Luanda, the authors found––through a case study and qualitative data collected among residents and non-residents of condominiums––that, contrary to the results from other studies, condominiums in Luanda are essentially sought after primarily for functional reasons such as access to infrastructure and better living.

  • 103.
    Udelsmann Rodrigues, Cristina
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Renovações da Polícia em Angola: cooperação e formação internacional2017In: Politeia : Revista do Instituto Superior de Ciências Policiais e Segurança Interna, ISSN 1640-0367, Vol. X-XII, p. 87-109Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The training of Angolan police officers under various international cooperation programs contributes to the construction of an original policing model in the country. The end of the war, the creation of training facilities in the country and the development of public policies favourable to the development of the national police lead to the renewal of the sector based on a model in a way hybrid as a result of various influences progressively built over the years. This article analyses these changes based on data collected in Angola as part of a wider research about the context of international cooperation in the area of training ofpolice officers.

  • 104.
    Udelsmann Rodrigues, Cristina
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    The Kwanhama partitioned by the border and the Angolan perspective of cross-border identity2017In: African Studies, ISSN 0002-0184, E-ISSN 1469-2872, Vol. 76, no 3, p. 423-443Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The Kwanhama, whose ancient kingdom occupies a vast area in Angola and in Namibia, are one of the African cases of people partitioned by the establishment of colonial borders. This division, along with the profound transformations of the last decades in the region – war, displacement and conditioned circulation – shaped the way a common identity has acquired different features in both countries. In the (under-researched) Angolan side, cross-border identity has progressively concentrated on the idea of a split between the two countries, as the Kwanhama king, Mandume, is believed to be buried on both sides of the border; and at the same time on the notion of a common belonging across the border. Based on data collected through fieldwork interviews in the Cunene province in Angola, this article adds to the discussion of the apparently ambiguous ideas of partitioned and shared notions of belonging.

  • 105.
    Udelsmann Rodrigues, Cristina
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    Urban Modernity versus the Blood Diamond Legacy: Angola’s Urban Mining Settlements in the Aftermath of War2017In: Journal of Southern African Studies, ISSN 0305-7070, E-ISSN 1465-3893, Vol. 43, no 6, p. 1215-1234Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    For most of the latter half of the 20th century, war carved the contours of settlement and mining activity in Angola. The aim of this article is twofold: first, to contrast migrant andurban livelihoods during the war, distinguishing between artisanal guerrilla diamond-diggingsettlements and the refuge ‘government cities’, and, secondly, to compare recent patternsof migration, livelihoods, mineral production and aspirations among urban residents. This article focuses on four urban settlements in the Lundas’ diamond-producing provinces, tracing wartime diamond growth in boom towns and cantonment in government cities. Post-war urban regeneration is characterised by investment in formal planned cities, and constraints on the informal mining boom towns and their garimpo artisanal miners. Questions are posed regarding these settlements’ population movements, livelihoods, residents’ conceptions of urban life and their quest for modernity. Amidst the multiplicity of wartime legacies and the envisaged reconstruction, renewed perceptions of urban life are increasingly focused on non-mining livelihoods.

  • 106.
    Zeller, Wolfgang
    et al.
    Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
    Melber, Henning
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    United in Separation?: Lozi Secessionism in Zambia and Namibia2018In: Secessionism in African Politics: Aspiration, Grievance, Performance, Disenchantment / [ed] Lotje de Vries, Pierre Englebert and Mareike Schomerus, Cham: Palgrave Macmillan , 2018, p. 293-328Chapter in book (Refereed)
  • 107.
    Østigård, Terje
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit. Uppsala universitet, Humanistisk-samhällsvetenskapliga vetenskapsområdet, Historisk-filosofiska fakulteten, Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia.
    Nilens livgivende vann: Ritualer og religioner fra kildene til den egyptiske sivilisasjonen2018Book (Other academic)
  • 108.
    Østigård, Terje
    The Nordic Africa Institute, Research Unit.
    The religious Nile: water, ritual and society since ancient Egypt2018Book (Refereed)
123 101 - 108 of 108
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