Society, Security, Sovereignty and the State in Somalia: From Statelessness to Statelessness?International Books, 2001 - 312 pages An analysis of internal dynamics of the Somali conflict and the relation between state and society, taking society and not the state as main reference point. Includes a discussion of UN / UNHCRs involvement in assistance to refugees in the special Somali situation of statelessness. |
From inside the book
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Page 192
... official banks and of- ficial exchange rates by involving Somali merchants as middlemen between the migrant worker and his family in Somalia . Somali traders used the hard currency of the migrant worker in order to purchase consumer ...
... official banks and of- ficial exchange rates by involving Somali merchants as middlemen between the migrant worker and his family in Somalia . Somali traders used the hard currency of the migrant worker in order to purchase consumer ...
Page 193
... official rate was one third of the black market rate . The state tried to regain control by offering a higher exchange rate to remitted money , but this largely failed ( Legum , 1981 / 82 ) . As part of the IMF structural adjustment ...
... official rate was one third of the black market rate . The state tried to regain control by offering a higher exchange rate to remitted money , but this largely failed ( Legum , 1981 / 82 ) . As part of the IMF structural adjustment ...
Page 195
... officially written out of any right to land . Social security in a sense of customarily codified rights of access to land ... official transfer of ownership , or in permanent fear of being expelled from the land or of having the harvest ...
... officially written out of any right to land . Social security in a sense of customarily codified rights of access to land ... official transfer of ownership , or in permanent fear of being expelled from the land or of having the harvest ...
Common terms and phrases
According activities Africa approach areas authority Barre became British British Somaliland central chapter civil claim clan collapse colonial communities considered continued Council critical critical security studies Darod discussion divided domination early economic elders established Ethiopia existence external faction farming forces formation framework groups Hawiye Horn idea identity important increased independence individual insecurity institutions integrated involved Isaq Italian Italian Somaliland Italy land leaders Lewis lineage live major means military Mogadishu Mohamed movements needs nomadic North Northern organizations origin particularly party pastoral peace policies political population position production protection refers refugees regard region relations relatively remained Rewin rule seasonal security studies social Somali society Somaliland South Southern sovereignty stateless structure territory theory tion towns trade traditional United various violence weak women