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The Elite Africa Database is a curated collection of resources for researchers interested in African elites. Search by keyword and filter your results by power domain, entry format, date, and other parameters.

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Ansoms, An. Re-Engineering Rural Society: The Visions and Ambitions of the Rwandan Elite, African Affairs, Volume 108, Issue 431, April 2009, Pages 289–309, https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adp001

This article analyses the Rwandan elite's visions and ambitions for a wide-ranging re-engineering of rural society. The post-1994 political elite has few links to rural society and the peasant way of life, and sees little room for small-scale peasant agriculture in Rwanda's economic future. The article shows how current Rwandan policy makers aim to realize three social engineering ambitions: first, to transform the agricultural sector into a professionalized motor for economic growth, centred on competitive and commercial farm units; second, to artificially upgrade rural life by inserting ‘modern’ techniques and strategies into local realities, while hiding true poverty and inequality; and, finally, to transform Rwanda into a target-driven society from the highest to the lowest level. The article points to the (potential) dangers, flaws, and shortcomings of this rural re-engineering mission, and illustrates how the state as the engineer ‘hovers’ above the local without consulting those affected. It concludes that contemporary polices are unlikely to be conducive to poverty reduction.

Source: Article's abstract

Ansoms, An. Re-Engineering Rural Society

This article analyses the Rwandan elite's visions and ambitions for a wide-ranging re-engineering of rural society. The article shows how current Rwandan policy makers aim to realize three social engineering ambitions: first, to transform the agricultural sector into a professionalized motor for economic growth, centred on competitive and commercial farm units; second, to artificially upgrade rural life by inserting ‘modern’ techniques and strategies into local realities, while hiding true poverty and inequality; and, finally, to transform Rwanda into a target-driven society from the highest to the lowest level.

Economic
Bibliographic

Anthony, Ross, and Uta Ruppert. “Scale and Agency in China’s Belt and Road Initiative: The Case of Kenya.” In Reconfiguring Transregionalisation in the Global South, 249–73. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing AG, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28311-7_12.

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is a vast infrastructure and development project spanning a large swathe of earth’s surface. In order to get an analytical handle on such a large project, this paper examines the impact of the BRI through the prism of a major infrastructure project currently taking place in Kenya on the East coast of Africa, namely the LAPSSET (Lamu-South Sudan-Ethiopia) corridor. While the project has been heralded by local officials as an economic game-changer for the country, it has mobilised a series of social responses, including discourses on corruption and the fostering of political factionalism, as well as anxieties surrounding environmental impacts and local livelihoods. In discussing these issues from a local perspective, it is noteworthy that the question of Chinese agency, rather than looming in the foreground, recedes far into the backdrop. Such observations raise questions of scale and agency in relation to the BRI: in its broadest sense, a Chinese-branded geopolitical strategy becomes, in a narrower sense, a reterritorialisation of domestic politics and the environment.

Source: Chapter abstract

Anthony, Ross, and Uta Ruppert. Scale and Agency in China’s Belt and Road Initiative

This chapter examines the impact of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) through the prism of a major infrastructure project currently taking place in Kenya on the East coast of Africa, namely the LAPSSET (Lamu-South Sudan-Ethiopia) corridor.

Economic
Political
Bibliographic

Anyansi-Archibong, Chi. The Foundation and Growth of African Women Entrepreneurs: Historical Perspectives and Modern Trends. 1st ed. Cham: Springer International Publishing AG, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66280-6.

This book explores how culture and tradition have impacted the tendency for African women to opt for entrepreneurship. The first section presents literature on the concept of entrepreneurship and introduces traditional African women entrepreneurs-the first-generation, culture-driven entrepreneurs, driven by the need to alleviate poverty within the family. The second section covers the modern, second-generation entrepreneurs driven by such forces as education, globalization, and technology. Further, the author assesses the regional perspectives on entrepreneurship and explores the entrepreneurial ecosystems to determine their relevance to the development of entrepreneurial spirit in Africa and among women in particular. This book expands on knowledge about the role that women play in the socio-economic development of the African continent.

Source: Book description by publisher

Anyansi-Archibong, Chi. The Foundation and Growth of African Women Entrepreneurs

This book explores how culture and tradition have impacted the tendency for African women to opt for entrepreneurship. The first section presents literature on the concept of entrepreneurship and introduces traditional African women entrepreneurs-the first-generation, culture-driven entrepreneurs, driven by the need to alleviate poverty within the family.

Economic
Bibliographic
Gender

Anyansi-Archibong, Chi. The Foundation and Growth of African Women Entrepreneurs: Historical Perspectives and Modern Trends. 1st ed. Cham: Springer International Publishing AG, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66280-6.

This book explores how culture and tradition have impacted the tendency for African women to opt for entrepreneurship. The first section presents literature on the concept of entrepreneurship and introduces traditional African women entrepreneurs-the first-generation, culture-driven entrepreneurs, driven by the need to alleviate poverty within the family. The second section covers the modern, second-generation entrepreneurs driven by such forces as education, globalization, and technology. Further, the author assesses the regional perspectives on entrepreneurship and explores the entrepreneurial ecosystems to determine their relevance to the development of entrepreneurial spirit in Africa and among women in particular. This book expands on knowledge about the role that women play in the socio-economic development of the African continent.

Source: book description by publisher

Anyansi-Archibong, Chi. The Foundation and Growth of African Women Entrepreneurs

This book explores how culture and tradition have impacted the tendency for African women to opt for entrepreneurship.

Economic
Bibliographic
Gender

Kofi Anyihodo

Academic and Poet, University of Ghana

Anyihodo Kofi

Academic and Poet, University of Ghana

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Wendy Appelbaum

Chair, De Morgenzon Estate
Wine estate
South Africa
demorgenzon.com

Appelbaum, Wendy

Chair, De Morgenzon Estate, Wine estate South Africa

Economic
Professional Contact
Gender

Kwame Anthony Appiah

Philosopher, Cultural Theorist Novelist, NYU

http://appiah.net

Appiah Kwame Anthony

Philosopher, Cultural Theorist Novelist, NYU

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Belinda Archibong

Assistant Professor of Economics, Columbia University

Contact: 212-854-8952/ba2207@columbia.edu

Archibong Belinda

Assistant Professor of Economics, Columbia University

Economic
Professional Contact
Gender
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