WINDS OF SMALL CHANGE: CHIEFS, CHIEFLY POWERS, EVOLVING POLITICS AND THE STATE IN ZIMBABWE, 1985–1999.

Lotti Nkomo
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In 1980, the independence government of Zimbabwe adopted a political and administrative policy which was hostile to chiefs. The charge was that chieftaincy was backward, unproductive, undemocratic, and a “sellout” institution that had sided with the colonial system. Consequently, chieftaincy was relegated to the fringes of the state, whereby it lost its authority over grassroots judicial and land affairs, a key marker of its power and status. However, from 1985 the government began to court the chiefs by, among other ways, ceasing hostile rhetoric and promising to return them their “original” powers. The scholarship has mainly explained this shift in terms of growing political opposition, among other factors that challenged the government’s legitimacy. This article examines the relationship between chiefs and government from 1985 to 1999. Building on literature that has emphasised the government’s motives for turning to chiefs, it considers whether chiefs got their powers back. It argues that the state did not cede back to chiefs the powers they yearned for and continued to keep them at the margins of its administrative processes. It mainly sought chiefs’ legitimating and mobilising capabilities in the context of waning political fortunes. By the close of the 1990s, chiefs were still battling to get their land and judicial powers back.
微小变化之风:首领,主要权力,演变中的政治和津巴布韦的国家,1985-1999。
1980年,津巴布韦独立政府采取了敌视酋长的政治和行政政策。他们指责酋长制度落后、低效、不民主,是一个站在殖民制度一边的“卖国”制度。因此,酋长制度被降级到国家的边缘,因此它失去了对基层司法和土地事务的权威,这是其权力和地位的关键标志。然而,从1985年开始,政府开始通过停止敌对言论和承诺归还他们“最初”的权力等方式来讨好酋长。学者们主要从不断增长的政治反对以及其他挑战政府合法性的因素来解释这种转变。本文考察了1985年至1999年间酋长与政府的关系。在强调政府转向酋长的动机的文献基础上,它考虑酋长是否重新获得了权力。它认为,国家并没有把他们渴望的权力交还给酋长,而是继续把他们置于行政程序的边缘。它主要是在政治命运日渐衰落的背景下寻求酋长们的合法化和动员能力。到20世纪90年代末,酋长们仍在为夺回他们的土地和司法权而斗争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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