Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps, tables and figures
- Preface
- Map A Liberia and Sierra Leone in West Africa
- 1 Political Comparison
- 2 Historical Summary
- 3 Resources
- 4 Rules
- 5 Political Allocation at the Centre
- 6 Centre and Periphery
- 7 Aspects of Political Economy
- 8 Concluding Review
- Statistical Appendix
- Bibliographical Note
- Notes
- Index
8 - Concluding Review
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps, tables and figures
- Preface
- Map A Liberia and Sierra Leone in West Africa
- 1 Political Comparison
- 2 Historical Summary
- 3 Resources
- 4 Rules
- 5 Political Allocation at the Centre
- 6 Centre and Periphery
- 7 Aspects of Political Economy
- 8 Concluding Review
- Statistical Appendix
- Bibliographical Note
- Notes
- Index
Summary
SIMILARITY AND DIFFERENCE
For all the contrasts between Sierra Leone and Liberia which this essay has been concerned to point out, any comparison of the two countries must start by emphasising their similarities. It is the similarities which make the two countries readily comparable in the first place, placing them in a common context in which differences stand out in such a way that their origins can be located.
These similarities chiefly belong to the first level of political comparison distinguished in the introduction, that of resources. In particular they derive from the resources, common in some degree to all developing countries, which have resulted from western penetration. Firstly, the states themselves were established through external imposition, and thus acquired the administrative apparatus through which this imposition could be managed. Secondly, their economies were drastically reshaped by involvement in the external market, resulting both in the penetration of the internal economy by actors from outside, and in the use of the state apparatus as an intermediary – through its powers of taxation, regulation and produce-marketing – between internal and external producers and markets. Thirdly, the skills and occupations which these political and economic structures called for were such that only a very small proportion of the population could acquire them, and thus attain positions of political influence. The skills were for the most part introduced ones – as lawyers, administrators, army officers – which thus required western education, which was necessarily limited to a few. The institutions and job opportunities which the economy and political structure could support were likewise restricted.
These common features of underdeveloped political systems have been reinforced in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Liberia and Sierra LeoneAn Essay in Comparative Politics, pp. 120 - 129Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1976