ABSTRACT

How do government arrangements emerge? When and how does individual agency turn into collective agency? How do sensory experiences of violence, instability, etc affect the configuration of governance arrangements? When, why, and how are governance arrangements institutionalized?

This book seeks to contribute to a non-normative conceptualization of the emergence and transformation of government arrangements, and addresses the under-theorization of actors and agency in conventional governance theories. The editors and contributors theorize the concept of governance more concretely by analyzing the key actors and arrangements that define states of governance across different places and by examining its performance and development in particular settings and time periods. Each contribution to the edited volume is based on a case-study drawn from Africa, though the book argues that the core issues identified remain the same across the world, though in different empirical contexts. The contributions also range across key disciplines, from anthropology to sociology to political science.

This ground-breaking volume addresses governance arrangements, discusses how social actors form such arrangements, and concludes by synthesizing an actor-centered understanding of political articulation to a general theory of governance. Scholars across disciplines such as political science, development studies, African studies, and sociology will find the book insightful.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

The Conceptual Polysemy of Governance

part |49 pages

Spaces and Struggles

chapter |27 pages

Transformation and Struggle

Space in Africa 1

chapter |20 pages

Agency across Changing Sites

The Path to Kenya's 2010 Constitution

part |40 pages

Everyday Practices

chapter |18 pages

Abandoning the Neo-Patrimonialist Paradigm

For a Pluralist Approach to the Bureaucratic Mode of Governance in Africa

chapter |20 pages

Between Governance and Domination

The Everyday Life of Uganda's Police Force

part |36 pages

Emergence and Transformation

chapter |15 pages

The Social Agency of Informal Settlers

A Case Study of “Moonlight Houses” in Addis Ababa

chapter |19 pages

Slow Activism and the Tactics of Legibility

A Case Study of the 2011 “Toilets Wars” and the Social Justice Coalition *

part |45 pages

Subjectivities and Articulations

chapter |29 pages

Experiences of Violence and the Formation of the Political

Embodied Memory and Victimhood in South Africa

chapter |14 pages

Imagining Otherwise

Dislocation, Subjectivity and the Articulation of Political Demands

part |24 pages

Conclusions

chapter |22 pages

The Formation of Governance

The Politics of Governance and Their Theoretical Dimensions