Table of contents for African anarchism : the history of a movement / by Sam Mbah & I.E. Igariwey.


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1. What Is Anarchism?
   definitions; attitudes toward capitalism, the state, religion, and other hierarchical
   institutions; positive aspects-voluntary cooperation, mutual aid, decentralization,
   horizontal organization, individual autonomy; what anarchism is not (chaos,
   terrorism); origins of anarcho-syndicalism
2. Anarchism in History
   Marx and Bakunin; the First Interational; disagreement over the role of the state;
   relationship to syndicalism and guild socialism
3. Anarchistic Precedents in Africa
   anarchic elements in African traditional societies; African communalism; political
   organization under communalism; administration of justice; traditional religions;
   age grades; secret societies; eonomic aspects; work specialization, trade, and the
   breakdown of communalism; stateless societies in Africa; the Igbo; the Niger
   Delta peoples; the Tallensi; colonialism and the incorporation of Africa into the
   world capitalist economy; economic aspects of colonialism; the colonial
   educational system; class formation in post-colonial Africa; function of different
   classes in post-colonial economies; African socialism; is there an African
   anarchism?; anarchistic elements in African socialism-Julius Nyerere and
   Ujamaa; anarchist groups in South Africa and Nigeria
4. The Development of Socialism in Africa
   class formation under colonialism; cooptation of local leaders; the trade union
   movement and the liberation struggle in Africa; the Nigerian labor union
   movement; lack of revolutionary perspective in Nigerian labor unions; the South
   African labor movement; foundation of Communist Party in South Africa; the
   "revolution" in Guinea; Sekou Toure and the Democratic Party of Guinea; the
   Awareness League in Nigeria



5. The Failure of Socialism in Africa
   ideology and economic development; failure of Guinean "revolution"; lessons
   from Guinean failure; Tanzania, Julius Nyerere and Ujamaa socialism; reasons
   for failure of Ujamaa socialism; additional failures of "African socialism"-
   Ethiopia, Burkina Faso; state capitalism and instability; one-party ideologies and
   depoliticization; military interventions and their effects; political corruption and
   social instability-case studies of Ghana and Nigeria; the IMF's structural
   adjustment programs (SAPs), electoralism, and Africa's future; economic and
   social effects of SAPs; constitutional conventions; the human rights question;
   repression in Nigeria, Libya, Ghana, and Zimbabwe
6. Obstacles to the Development of Anarchism in Africa
   colonial education and its aftermath; the Western-style legal system; the military;
   ethnic versus class consciousness; religious and cultural factors; the need for
   international solidarity
7. Anarchism's Future in Africa
   anarchism in a world context; the crises of capitalism and marxist "socialism";
   Africa's dire economic situation; anarchism and the national question;
   anarchism-the only way out for Africa