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Institutions, Security, and Pastoralism: Exploring the Limits of Hybridity

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dc.creator Cleaver, Frances
dc.creator Franks, Tom
dc.creator Hall, Kurt
dc.creator Maganga, Faustin P.
dc.date 2016-03-24T09:37:09Z
dc.date 2016-03-24T09:37:09Z
dc.date 2013-12
dc.identifier Cleaver, F., Franks, T., Maganga, F. and Hall, K., 2013. Institutions, security, and pastoralism: Exploring the limits of hybridity. African Studies Review, 56(3), pp.165-189.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1315
dc.identifier 10.1017/asr.2013.84
dc.description Full text can be accessed at http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/african_studies_review/v056/56.3.cleaver.html
dc.description This article furthers our understanding of how state and citizens interact to produce local institutions and examines the effects of these processes. It brings critical institutional theory into engagement with ideas about everyday governance to analyze how hybrid arrangements are formed through bricolage. Such a perspective helps us to understand governance arrangements as both negotiated and structured, benefiting some and disadvantaging others. To explore these points the article tracks the evolution of the Sungusungu, a hybrid pastoralist security institution in the Usangu Plains, Tanzania. It also considers the wider implications of such hybrid arrangements for livelihoods, social inclusion, distributive justice, and citizenship.
dc.language en
dc.subject Institutions
dc.subject Security
dc.subject Pastoralism
dc.subject Hybridity
dc.title Institutions, Security, and Pastoralism: Exploring the Limits of Hybridity
dc.type Journal Article


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