Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Glossary
- General introduction
- Part One FROM ZARIBA TO MERKAZ: THE CREATION OF THE NODAL STATE FRONTIER, c. 1840–1920
- Part Two FROM MAKAMA TO MEJLIS: THE MAKING OF CHIEFSHIP AND THE LOCAL STATE, 1920s–1950s
- Part Three FROM MALAKIYA TO MEDINA: THE FLUCTUATING EXPANSION OF THE URBAN FRONTIER, c. 1956–2010
- 7 Trading knowledge: chiefship, local elites and the urban frontier, c. 1956–2010
- 8 Regulating depredation: chiefs and the military, 1963–2005
- 9 Reprising ‘tradition’: the mutual production of community and state in the twenty-first century
- 10 Knowing the system: judicial pluralism and discursive legalism in the interim period, 2005–2010
- Conclusion
- Interviews
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastern African Studiues
7 - Trading knowledge: chiefship, local elites and the urban frontier, c. 1956–2010
from Part Three - FROM MALAKIYA TO MEDINA: THE FLUCTUATING EXPANSION OF THE URBAN FRONTIER, c. 1956–2010
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Glossary
- General introduction
- Part One FROM ZARIBA TO MERKAZ: THE CREATION OF THE NODAL STATE FRONTIER, c. 1840–1920
- Part Two FROM MAKAMA TO MEJLIS: THE MAKING OF CHIEFSHIP AND THE LOCAL STATE, 1920s–1950s
- Part Three FROM MALAKIYA TO MEDINA: THE FLUCTUATING EXPANSION OF THE URBAN FRONTIER, c. 1956–2010
- 7 Trading knowledge: chiefship, local elites and the urban frontier, c. 1956–2010
- 8 Regulating depredation: chiefs and the military, 1963–2005
- 9 Reprising ‘tradition’: the mutual production of community and state in the twenty-first century
- 10 Knowing the system: judicial pluralism and discursive legalism in the interim period, 2005–2010
- Conclusion
- Interviews
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastern African Studiues
Summary
During the most intense periods of civil war or uprising since 1955, most people took refuge in more remote parts of ‘the bush’ or across southern Sudan's borders. A much smaller proportion sought safety in the government-held towns, despite their repressive security regimes. But whenever there has been sufficient peace or stability, people have swiftly returned to – or relocated to – the small towns, in search of employment, enterprise and education. The edges of the town might be seen as the frontiers and limits of state power, as in much wider analysis of post-colonial African states; as such, the towns have often been analysed as a space of threatening, external power. Indeed, the appearance of a stark urban-rural dichotomy prevails in much moral commentary among South Sudanese themselves, who frequently depict the town as an alien, immoral world of money and antisocial behaviour. In part this reflects – and acts as a warning against – the continuing instabilities, limitations and risks of urban living, experienced by a whole range of people.
But rather than repelling people, the negative aspects of town and government have only underscored the need to obtain knowledge of the regulations and procedures that might offer security and protection, and turn threat into guarantee. This chapter explores both the reasons for the urban-rural moral dichotomy, and the complex urban-rural connections that it belies.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Dealing with Government in South SudanHistories of Chiefship, Community and State, pp. 147 - 164Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013