The Thornton School’s Midori Goto presents student violinists, who perform works by Bach to celebrate Valentine’s Day.
February 14
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Africa: Unity, Sovereignty and Sorrow
Wednesday, October 15, 2008 : 12:30pm to 2:00pm
University Park Campus
Social Sciences Building
B-40
Free
Drawing from his book, Pierre Englebert asks why oppressive — yet otherwise ineffective — African regimes remain unchallenged.
Though the demise of one or another African state has been heralded for nearly five decades, the map of the continent remains virtually unchanged. By and large, these states are judged failures. And yet they endure.
In this lecture, drawn from his forthcoming book, Pierre Englebert asks why. Why do these structures remain broadly unchallenged? Why do Africans themselves, who have received little in the way of security, basic welfare or development, continue to embrace their states and display surprising levels of nationalist fervor?
Englebert finds his answer in the benefits that sovereign weak states offer to Africa's regional and national elites — and to those who depend on them. He carefully articulates the manner in which international sovereignty is translated into domestic legal command — and the sorrow that ensues. He also offers some corrective "policy fantasies." Effectively combining theory, cross-national quantitative methods and case studies, his book reveals a pattern of reproduction of a predatory, dysfunctional state in which human integrity is sacrificed to its territorial counterpart.
Lunch will be provided.