Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T10:16:13.733Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sovereignty and Socialism in Tanzania: The Historiography of an African State1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 May 2014

Paul K. Bjerk*
Affiliation:
Texas Tech University

Extract

Observers of the Tanzanian political scene would point out that the country makes its own decisions on matters of internal and international importance. The policy of Ujamaa Vijijini [African socialism in the villages], it would be argued, was formulated here and not at the dictate of any foreign power.

In an edited volume entitled The State in Tanzania, published in 1980 just before the precipitous denouement of President Julius Nyerere's philosophy of African socialism known as Ujamaa, Haroub Othman began with the question of the sub-title, “Who Controls it and Whose Interest Does it Serve?” The cover featured a large black question mark on a red background. Provocatively Othman asked, “can one say in a specific and definite sense that Tanzania is building socialism?” Exhibiting a remarkable level of open criticism of the government in a one-party state, the essays framed their issues in the Marxist terms that were long predominant in literature on the Tanzanian state. The book dealt with an ongoing concern that Tanzania's ambitious goals for democracy and development were not being met and the overarching nationalist question of which sovereign defined those goals. It was a question that continues to vex political scientists of Africa today who seek to reconcile Westphalian concepts of sovereignty with the layered realities of African polities struggling to exert sovereign authority both internally and externally.

Reviewing a representative sample of nearly fifty years of scholarship on the postcolonial Tanzanian state, one is struck by the tension enervating Othman's essays. Scholars are torn between the impulse to understand the theoretical implications of Tanzania's experience for socialism and a more pragmatic concern to evaluate the country's claim to sovereign authority.

Type
Historiographical Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

Thanks to Thomas Spear, Florence Bernault, Michael Schatzberg, Ronald Aminzade and anonymous readers for their input, as well as the JFK and LBJ Presidential libraries, the US and Tanzanian National Archives, the British Public Record Office, the Borthwick Institute in York, and the Mwalimu Nyerere Foundation.

References

Abrahams, Ray, “Sungusungu: Village Vigilante Groups in Tanzania,” African Affairs 86 (1987), 179–96.Google Scholar
Allman, Jean M., The Quills of the Porcupine: Asante Nationalism in an Emergent Ghana (Madison, 1993).Google Scholar
Alpers, Edward A., “Africa Reconfigured: Presidential Address to the 1994 African Studies Association Annual Meeting,” African Studies Review 38(1995), 110.Google Scholar
Aminzade, Ronald, “From Race to Citizenship: The Indigenization Debate in Post-Socialist Tanzania,” Studies in Comparative International Development 38 (2003), 4463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anghie, Antony, Imperialism, Sovereignty, and the Making of International Law (London, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aseka, Eric Masinde, Transformational Leadership in East Africa: Politics, Ideology and Community (Kampala, 2005).Google Scholar
Askew, Kelly M., Performing the Nation: Swahili Music and Cultural Politics in Tanzania (Chicago, 2002).Google Scholar
Balisidya, May Lenna, “Language Planning and Oral Creativity in Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1988).Google Scholar
Barkan, Joel D., with Okumu, John J., Politics and Public Policy in Kenya and Tanzania (New York, 1979).Google Scholar
Barongo, Edward, Mkiki Mkiki wa Siasa Tanganyika (Dar es Salaam, 1966).Google Scholar
Bates, Robert H., When Things Fell Apart: State Failure in Late-Century Africa (Cambridge, 2008).Google Scholar
Bayart, Jean-François, The State in Africa: The Politics of the Belly (New York, 1993).Google Scholar
Bienen, Henry, Tanzania: Party Transformation and Economic Development (Princeton, 1970).Google Scholar
Bjerk, Paul K., “Building a New Eden: Lutheran Church Youth Choir Performances in Tanzania,” Journal of Religion in Africa 35 (2005), 324–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brennan, James R., “Blood Enemies: Exploitation and Urban Citizenship in the Nationalist Political Thought of Tanzania, 1958-1975,” Journal of African History 47 (2006), 387411.Google Scholar
Brennan, James R., “Youth, the TANU Youth League, and Managed Vigilantism in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania 1925-1973,” Africa: Journal of the International Africa Institute 76 (2006), 221–46.Google Scholar
Brennan, James R., “Realizing Civilization through Patrilineal Descent: African Intellectuals and the Making of an African Racial Nationalism in Tanzania, 1920-1950,” Social Identities 12 (2006), 405–23.Google Scholar
Brockington, Dan, Fortress Conservation: The Preservation of the Mkomazi Game Reserve (Bloomington/Indianapolis, 2002).Google Scholar
Buchert, Lene, Education in the Development of Tanzania, 1919-1990 (Athens OH, 1994).Google Scholar
Burgess, Thomas, “Cinema, Bell Bottoms, and Miniskirts: Struggles Over Youth and Citizenship in Revolutionary Zanzibar,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 35 (2002), 287313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, Thomas, “The Young Pioneers and the Rituals of Citizenship in Revolutionary Zanzibar,” Africa Today 51 (2005), 329.Google Scholar
Burgess, Thomas, Race, Revolution, and the Struggle for Human Rights in Zanzibar: the Memoirs of Ali Sultan Issa and Seif Sharif Hamad (Athens OH, 2009).Google Scholar
Burton, Andrew, and Charton-Bigot, Hélène, Generations Past: Youth in East African History (Athens OH, 2010).Google Scholar
Caplan, Pat, African Voices, African Lives: Personal Narratives from a Swahili Village (New York, 1997).Google Scholar
Chande, Abdin N., Islam, Ulamaa and Community Development in Tanzania: A Case Study of Religious Current in East Africa (San Francisco, 1998).Google Scholar
Chidzero, B.T.G., Tanganyika and International Trusteeship (London, 1961).Google Scholar
Clayton, Anthony, The Zanzibar Revolution and its Aftermath (Hamden, 1981).Google Scholar
Cliffe, Lionel, and Saul, John S. (ed.), Socialism in Tanzania, Volumes 1 and 2 (Dar es Salaam, 1973).Google Scholar
Cooper, Frederick, Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British Africa (Cambridge, 1996).Google Scholar
Cooper, Frederick, Africa Since 1940: The Past and the Present (Cambridge, 2002).Google Scholar
Cooper, Frederick, Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History (Berkeley, 2005).Google Scholar
Coulson, Andrew, Tanzania: A Political Economy (Oxford, 1982).Google Scholar
Des Forges, Alison, Leave None To Tell the Story: Genocide in Rwanda (New York, 1999).Google Scholar
Diop, Momar Coumba, Senegal: Essay in Statecraft (Dakar, 1993).Google Scholar
Dorman, Sara, et al., Making Nations, Creating Strangers: States and Citizenship in Africa (Leiden, 2007).Google Scholar
Duggan, William R., and Civille, John R.Tanzania and Nyerere: A Study of Ujamaa and Nationhood (Maryknoll, 1976).Google Scholar
Dumbuya, Peter A., Tanganyika Under International Mandate, 1919-1946 (New York, 1995).Google Scholar
Eckert, Andreas, “Useful Instruments of Participation? Local Government and Cooperatives in Tanzania, 1940s to 1970s,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 40 (2007), 97118.Google Scholar
Ekeh, Peter P., “Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 17 (1975), 91112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fatton, Robert, Predatory Rule: State and Civil Society in Africa (Boulder, 1992).Google Scholar
Feierman, Steven, Peasant Intellectuals: Anthropology and History in Tanzania (Madison, 1990).Google Scholar
Feierman, Steven, “African Histories and the Dissolution of World History,” in: Bates, Robert H.et al., Africa and the Disciplines: The Contributions of Research in Africa to the Social Sciences and Humanities (Chicago, 1993).Google Scholar
Ferguson, James, The Anti-Politics Machine (Cambridge, 1990).Google Scholar
Finucane, James R., Rural Development and Bureaucracy in Tanzania: The Case of Mwanza Region (Uppsala, 1974).Google Scholar
Fisher, Esther Klein, “The Roots of Ujamaa,” PhD dissertation (University of Minnesota, 1975).Google Scholar
Forster, Peter G., and Maghimbi, Sam (ed.) The Tanzanian Peasantry: Economy in Crisis (Brookfield, 1992).Google Scholar
Foucault, Michel, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (New York, 1977).Google Scholar
Gasarasi, Charles P., “The Tripartite Approach to the Resettlement and Integration of Rural Refugees in Tanzania” (Uppsala: Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Research Report 71, 1984).Google Scholar
Geiger, Susan, TANU Women: Gender and Culture in the Making of Tanganyikan Nationalism, 1955-1965 (Portsmouth NH, 1997).Google Scholar
Georgulas, Nikos, “Structure and Communication: A Study of the Tanganyika Settlement Agency,” PhD dissertation (Syracuse University, 1967).Google Scholar
Giblin, James L., and Maddox, Gregory H. (ed.) Custodians of the Land: Ecology & Culture in the History of Tanzania (Athens OH, 1996).Google Scholar
Gower, R.H., “An Experiment in District Training,” Journal of African Administration 4/1 (1952), 69.Google Scholar
Hartmann, Jeanette (ed.), Re-Thinking the Arusha Declaration (Copenhagen, 1991).Google Scholar
Herbst, Jeffrey, States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control (Princeton, 2000).Google Scholar
Hoffman, John, Sovereignty (Minneapolis, 1998).Google Scholar
Hopkins, Raymond F., Political Roles in a New State: Tanzania's First Decade (New Haven, 1971).Google Scholar
Hyden, Goran, Beyond Ujamaa in Tanzania: Under development and an Uncaptured Peasantry (Berkeley, 1980).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyden, Goran, Tanu Yajenga Nchi: Political Development in Rural Tanzania (Lund, 1968).Google Scholar
Iliffe, John, A Modern History of Tanganyika (Cambridge, 1979).Google Scholar
Ingle, Clyde R., From Village to State in Tanzania: The Politics of Rural Development (Ithaca, 1972).Google Scholar
Ivaska, Andrew M., “Of Students, ‘Nizers,’ and a Struggle over Youth: Tanzania's 1966 National Service Crisis,” Africa Today 51 (2005), 83107.Google Scholar
Ivaska, Andrew M., “‘Anti-Mini Militants Meet Modern Misses’: Urban Style, Gender and the Politics of ‘National Culture’ in 1960s Dar es Salaam, Tanzania,“ Gender & History 14 (2002), 584607.Google Scholar
Jackson, Robert H.Quasi-States, Dual Regimes, and Neoclassical Theory: International Jurisprudence and the Third World,” International Organization 41 (1987), 519–49.Google Scholar
James, C.L.R., Nkrumah and the Ghana Revolution (Westport, 1977).Google Scholar
Jennings, Michael, “‘A Very Real War’: Popular Participation in Development in Tanzania During the 1950s and 1960s,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 40 (2007), 7195.Google Scholar
Jennings, Michael, Surrogates of the State: NGOs, Development, and Ujamaa in Tanzania (Bloomfield, 2008).Google Scholar
Joseph, Richard A., Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria: The Rise and Fall of the Second Republic (Cambridge, 1987).Google Scholar
Kahama, C. George, et al., The Challenge for Tanzania's Economy (Portsmouth NH, 1986).Google Scholar
Kassum, Al Noor, Africa's Winds of Change: Memoirs of an International Tanzanian (New York, 2007).Google Scholar
Kelsall, Tim, “Governance, Local Politics and Districtization in Tanzania: The 1998 Arumeru Tax Revolt,” African Affairs 99 (2000), 533–51.Google Scholar
Kelsall, Tim, “Shop Windows and Smoke-Filled Rooms: Governance and the Re-Politicisation of Tanzania,” The Journal of Modern African Studies 40 (2002), 597619.Google Scholar
Kijanga, Peter Alute S., “Ujamaa and the Role of the Church in Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (Aquinas Institute of Theology, 1977).Google Scholar
Kjekshus, Helge, “The Tanzanian Villagization Policy: Implementational Lessons and Ecological Dimensions,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 11 (1977), 269–82.Google Scholar
Kjekshus, Helge, Ecology Control and Economic Development in East African History (Athens OH, 1996).Google Scholar
Klerruu, Wilbert, The Systematic Creation and Operation of TANU Cells (London, 1968 [est.]).Google Scholar
Klitgaard, Robert, Tropical Gangsters: One Man's Experience with Development and Decadence in Deepest Africa (New York, 1990).Google Scholar
Kreinin, Mordechai E., Israel and Africa—A Study in Technical Cooperation (New York, 1964).Google Scholar
Landau, Loren B., The Humanitarian Hangover: Displacement, Aid and Transformation in Western Tanzania (Johannesburg, 2008).Google Scholar
Langford, Tonya, “Things Fall Apart: State Failure and the Politics of Intervention,” International Studies Review 1 (1999), 5979.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Tony, with McRae, Christopher, The Dar Mutiny of 1964, And the Armed Intervention that Ended It (Sussex, 2007).Google Scholar
Leith, J. Clark, Why Botswana Prospered (Montreal, 2005).Google Scholar
Leys, Colin, “Tanganyika: The Realities of Independence,” International Journal 17 (1962), 251–68.Google Scholar
Lofchie, Michael F., Zanzibar: Background to Revolution (Princeton, 1965).Google Scholar
Lofchie, Michael F., “Agrarian Crisis and Economic Liberalisation in Tanzania,” Journal of Modern African Studies 16 (1978), 451–75.Google Scholar
Lonsdale, John, “The Tanzanian Experiment,” African Affairs 67 (1968), 330–44.Google Scholar
Lonsdale, John, “The Moral Economy of Mau Mau: Wealth, Poverty and Civic Virtue in Kikuyu Political Thought,” in: Berman, Bruce, and Lonsdale, John, Unhappy Valley: Conflict in Kenya and Africa, Books I and II (Athens OH, 1992).Google Scholar
Ludwig, Frieder, Church and State in Tanzania: Aspects of a Changing Relationship, 1961-1994 (Boston, 1999).Google Scholar
Maeda, Justin H., “Popular Participation, Control and Development: A Study of the Nature and Role of Popular Participation in Tanzania's Rural Development,” PhD dissertation (Yale University, 1976).Google Scholar
Maddox, Gregory H., and Giblin, James L. (ed.), In Search of a Nation: Histories of Authority & Dissidence in Tanzania (Athens OH, 2005).Google Scholar
Maddox, Gregory H., and Giblin, James L., with Kongola, Ernest M., Practicing History in Central Tanzania: Writing, Memory, and Performance (Portsmouth NH, 2007).Google Scholar
Magesa, Laurenti, “Ujamaa Socialism in Tanzania: A Theological Assessment,” PhD dissertation (St. Paul University, 1985).Google Scholar
Magotti, John, Simba wa Vita Katika Historia ya Tanzania: Mfaume Rashidi Kawawa (Dar es Salaam, 2009).Google Scholar
Maguire, G. Andrew, Toward ‘Uhuru’ in Tanzania: The Politics of Participation (Cambridge, 1969).Google Scholar
Malkki, Liisa H., Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory, and National Cosmology among Hutu Refugees in Tanzania (Chicago, 1995).Google Scholar
Mamdani, Mahmood, Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (Princeton, 1996).Google Scholar
Mamdani, Mahmood, When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda (Princeton, 2001).Google Scholar
Matthews, K., and Mushi, S.S., Foreign Policy of Tanzania 1961-1981: A Reader (Dar Es Salaam, 1983).Google Scholar
Mbembe, Achille, On the Postcolony (Berkeley, 2001).Google Scholar
Mbogoni, Lawrence E.Y., The Cross and the Crescent: Religion and Politics in Tanzania from the 1880s to the 1990s (Dar es Salaam, 2005).Google Scholar
McHenry, Dean E. Jr., Tanzania's Ujamaa Villages: The Implementation of a Rural Development Strategy (Berkeley, 1979).Google Scholar
McHenry, Dean E. Jr., Limited Choices: The Political Struggle for Socialism in Tanzania (Boulder, 1994).Google Scholar
Mdundo, Mineal O., Utenzi wa Jeshi la Wananchi Tanzania (Dar es Salaam, 1987).Google Scholar
Mdundo, Mineal O., Masimulizi ya Sheikh Thabit Kombo Jecha (Dar es Salaam, 1999).Google Scholar
Miguel, Edward, “Tribe or Nation? Nation Building and Public Goods in Kenya versus Tanzania,” World Politics 56 (2004), 327–62.Google Scholar
Miti, Katabaro, Whither Tanzania (Delhi, 1987).Google Scholar
Mmuya, Max, Multi-Party Politics in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam, 1993).Google Scholar
Mmuya, Max, Tanzania: Political Reform in Eclipse: Crises and Cleavage in Political Parties (Dar es Salaam, 1998).Google Scholar
Mohamed, Saira, “From Keeping Peace to Building Peace: A Proposal for a Revitalized United Nations Trusteeship Council,” Columbia Law Review 105 (2005), 809–40.Google Scholar
Mohiddin, Ahmed, African Socialism in Two Countries (Totowa, 1981).Google Scholar
Monson, Jamie, Africa's Freedom Railway: How a Chinese Development Project Changed Lives and Livelihoods in Tanzania (Bloomington/Indianapolis, 2008).Google Scholar
Mtei, Edwin, From Goatherd to Governor: The Autobiography of Edwin Mtei (Dar es Salaam, 2009).Google Scholar
Mushi, Samuel S., and Mukandala, Rwekaza S.Multiparty Democracy in Transition. Tanzania's 1995 General Elections (Dar es Salaam, 1997).Google Scholar
Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era (Dar es Salaam, 2007).Google Scholar
Mwansasu, Bismarck, and Pratt, Cranford. Toward Socialism in Tanzania (Toronto, 1979).Google Scholar
Mwapachu, Juma, Confronting New Realities: Reflections on Tanzania's Radical Transformation (Dar es Salaam, 2005).Google Scholar
Nellis, John R., A Theory of Ideology: The Tanzanian Example (Oxford, 1972).Google Scholar
Nimtz, August H. Jr., Islam and Politics in East Africa: The Sufi Order in Tanzania (Minneapolis, 1980).Google Scholar
Njozi, Hamza Mustafa, The Mwembechai Killings and the Political Future of Tanzania (Ottowa, 2000).Google Scholar
Nkrumah, Kwame, Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism (London, 1965).Google Scholar
Nnoli, Okwudiba, “Reflections on the Study of Political Science in Africa,” in: Kimambo, Isaria N. (ed.), Humanities and Social Sciences in East and Central Africa: Theory and Practice (Dar es Salaam, 2003).Google Scholar
Nnoli, Okwudiba, Self Reliance and Foreign Policy in Tanzania: The Dynamics of the Diplomacy of a New State, 1961 to 1971 (New York, 1978).Google Scholar
Nolutshungu, Sam C., Limits of Anarchy: Intervention and State Formation in Chad (Charlottesville, 1996).Google Scholar
Nugent, Paul, Africa Since Independence: A Comparative History (New York, 2004).Google Scholar
Nursey-Bray, P.F., “Tanzania: The Development Debate,” African Affairs 79 (1980), 5578.Google Scholar
Nye, Joseph S. Jr., Pan-Africanism and East African Integration (Cambridge, 1965).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., Freedom and Unity (Oxford, 1967).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., Freedom and Socialism (Oxford, 1968).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., Ujamaa: Essays on Socialism (Oxford, 1968).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., Freedom and Development (Oxford, 1973).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., “Socialism and Rural Development” [1967] in Cliffe, Lionelet al. (ed.) Rural Cooperation in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam, 1975), 930.Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., Africa Today and Tomorrow (Dar es Salaam, 2000).Google Scholar
Nyerere, Juiius K., et al., The Challenge to the South: Report of the South Commission (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Nzomo, Maria, “The Foreign Policy of Kenya and Tanzania: The Impact of Dependence and Underdevelopment,” PhD dissertation (Dalhousie University, 1981).Google Scholar
Ogot, Bethwell A., Falola, Toyin, and Odhiambo, Atieno (ed.) The Challenges of History and Leadership in Africa: The Essays of Bethwell Allan Ogot (Trenton, 2002).Google Scholar
Ogot, Bethwell A., “Rereading the History and Historiography of Epistemic Domination and Resistance in Africa,” African Studies Review 52 (2009), 122.Google Scholar
Othman, Haroub (ed.), 1980. The State in Tanzania: Who Controls It and Whose Interest Does It Serve? (Dar es Salaam, 1980).Google Scholar
Othman, Haroub, “Mwalimu Julius Nyerere: An Intellectual in Power,” Pambazuka 452, http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/59505 (accessed 24 October 2009).Google Scholar
Parsons, Timothy H., The 1964 Army Mutinies and the Making of Modern East Africa (Westport, 2003).Google Scholar
Pels, Peter, “Creolisation in Secret the Birth of Nationalism in Late Colonial Uluguru, Tanzania,” Africa: Journal of the International African Institute 72 (2002), 128.Google Scholar
Petterson, Don, Revolution in Zanzibar: An American's Cold War Tale (Boulder, 2002).Google Scholar
Pfaff, William, “A New Colonialism? Europe Must Go Back to Africa,” Foreign Affairs (January/February 1995), 26.Google Scholar
Phillips, Kristin D., “Hunger, Healing, and Citizenship in Central Tanzania,” African Studies Review 52 (2009), 2345.Google Scholar
Pinkney, Robert, The International Politics of East Africa (Manchester, 2001).Google Scholar
Ponte, Stefano, Farmers and Markets in Tanzania: How Policy Reforms Affect Rural Livelihoods in Africa (Portsmouth NH, 2002).Google Scholar
Pratt, Cranford, The Critical Phase in Tanzania, 1945-1968: Nyerere and the Emergence of a Socialist Strategy (Cambridge, 1976).Google Scholar
Pratt, Cranford, “Democracy and Socialism in Tanzania: A Reply to John Saul,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 12 (1978), 407–28.Google Scholar
Pratt, Cranford, “Tanzania: The Development Debate—A Comment,” African Affairs 79 (1980), 343–47.Google Scholar
Prunier, Gérard, The Rwanda Crisis: History of a Genocide (New York, 1995).Google Scholar
Rathbone, Richard, Nkrumah and the Chiefs: The Politics of Chieftaincy in Ghana, 1951-60 (Athens OH, 2000).Google Scholar
Reno, William, Corruption and State Politics in Sierra Leone (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Resnick, Idiran N., The Long Transition: Building Socialism in Tanzania (New York, 1981).Google Scholar
Rodney, Walter, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (Dar es Salaam, 1989).Google Scholar
Rugumamu, Severine M., Lethal Aid: The Illusion of Socialism and Self-Reliance in Tanzania (Trenton, 1997).Google Scholar
Said, Mohamed, Abdulwahid Sykes. 1924-1968: The Untold Story of the Muslim Struggle against British Colonialism in Tanganyika (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Samoff, Joel, Tanzania: Local Politics and the Structure of Power (Madison, 1974).Google Scholar
Samoff, Joel, “Crises and Socialism in Tanzania,” Journal of Modern African Studies 19 (1981), 279306.Google Scholar
Saul, John S., The State and Revolution in Eastern Africa (New York, 1979).Google Scholar
Saul, John S., “Tanzania's Transition to Socialism?Canadian Journal of African Studies 11 (1977), 313–39.Google Scholar
Schatzberg, Michael G., Political Legitimacy in Middle Africa: Food, Family, and Father (Bloomington/Indianapolis, 2001).Google Scholar
Schmidt, Elizabeth, Mobilizing the Masses: Gender, Ethnicity, and Class in the Nationalist Movement in Guinea, 1939-1958 (Portsmouth NH, 2005).Google Scholar
Schneider, Leander, “Developmentalism and Its Failings: Why Rural Development Went Wrong in the 1960s and 1970s Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (Columbia University, 2003).Google Scholar
Schneider, Leander, “Freedom and Unfreedom in Rural Development: Julius Nyerere, Ujamaa Vijijini, and Villagization,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 38 (2004), 344–92.Google Scholar
Schneider, Leander, “The Maasai's New Clothes: A Developmentalist Modernity and Its Exclusions,” Africa Today 53 (2006), 101–31.Google Scholar
Schneider, Leander, “Colonial Legacies and Postcolonial Authoritarianism in Tanzania: Connects and Disconnects,” African Studies Review 49 (2006), 93118.Google Scholar
Scott, James C., Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance (New Haven, 1987).Google Scholar
Scott, James C., Domination and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts (New Haven, 1990).Google Scholar
Scott, James C., Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed (New Haven, 1998).Google Scholar
Semujanga, Josias, Origins of Rwandan Genocide (New York, 2003).Google Scholar
Shapiro, Kenneth H., “Efficiency and Modernization in African Agriculture: A Case Study in Geita District, Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (Stanford University, 1973).Google Scholar
Shivji, Issa G., Class Struggles in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam, 1975).Google Scholar
Shivji, Issa G., “Reforming Local Government or Localizing Government Reform” in Mpangala, Gaudens P.et al. (ed.), Commemorations of Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere's 79th and 80th Birth Dates (Dar es Salaam, 2004).Google Scholar
Shivji, Issa G., Let the People Speak: Tanzania Down the Road to Neo-Liberalism (Dakar, 2006).Google Scholar
Shivji, Issa G., Pan-Africanism or Pragmatism? Lessons of the Tanganyika-Zanzibar Union (Dar es Salaam, 2008).Google Scholar
Sivalon, John C.Roman Catholicism and the Defining of Tanzanian Socialism, 1953-1985: An Analysis of the Social Ministry of the Roman Catholic Church in Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (St. Michael's College [University of Toronto], 1990).Google Scholar
Smith, Daniel R., The Influence of the Fabian Colonial Bureau on the Independence Movement in Tanganyika (Athens OH, 1985).Google Scholar
Sommers, Marc, Fear in Bongoland: Burundi Refugees in Urban Tanzania (New York, 2001).Google Scholar
Spiegel, Gabrielle M. (ed.), Practicing History: New Directions in Historical Writing after the Linguistic Turn (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Spruyt, Hendrik, The Sovereign State and its Competitors: An Analysis of Systems Change (Princeton, 1996).Google Scholar
Stephens, Hugh W., The Political Transformation of Tanganyika, 1920-67 (New York, 1968).Google Scholar
Stöger-Eising, Viktoria, “Ujamaa’ Revisited: Indigenous and European Influences in Nyerere's Social and Political Thought,” Africa: Journal of the International African Institute 70 (2000), 118–43.Google Scholar
Straker, Jay, Youth, Nationalism, and the Guinean Revolution (Bloomington/Indianapolis, 2009).Google Scholar
Straus, Scott, The Order of Genocide: Race, Power, and War in Rwanda (Ithaca, 2006).Google Scholar
Sundet, Geir, “Beyond Developmentalism in Tanzania,” Review of African Political Economy 21 (1994), 3949.Google Scholar
Sunseri, Thaddeus, “Statist Narratives and Maji Maji Ellipses,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 33 (2000), 567–84.Google Scholar
Sunseri, Thaddeus, Wielding the Ax: State Forestry and Social Conflict in Tanzania, 1820-2000 (Athens OH, 2009).Google Scholar
Tanzania People's Defence Forces (TPDF), Tanganyika Rifles Mutiny January 1964 (Dar es Salaam, 1993).Google Scholar
Taylor, Christopher C., Sacrifice as Terror: The Rwandan Genocide of 1994 (New York, 1999).Google Scholar
Temu, Andrew E., and Due, Jean M., “The Business Environment in Tanzania after Socialism: Challenges of Reforming Banks, Parastatals, Taxation and the Civil Service,” The Journal of Modern African Studies 38 (2000), 683712.Google Scholar
Tibanyendera, Raphael, “The Role of TANU in Rural Transformation: A Case Study in Bukoba,” PhD dissertation (University of Dar es Salaam, 1972).Google Scholar
Tordoff, William, Government and Politics in Tanzania: A Collection of Essays Covering the Period from September 1960 to July 1966 (Nairobi, 1967).Google Scholar
Tordoff, William, and Mazrui, Ali A.The Left and the Super-Left in Tanzania,” Journal of Modern African Studies 10 (1972), 427–45.Google Scholar
Tripp, Aili Mari, Changing the Rules: The Politics of Liberalization and the Urban Informal Economy in Tanzania (Berkeley, 1997).Google Scholar
Tsuruta, Tadasu, “African Imaginations of Moral Economy: Notes on Indigenous Economic Concepts and Practices in Tanzania,” African Studies Quarterly 9 (2006), 103–16.Google Scholar
Turner, Terisa, “Commercial Capitalism and the 1975 Coup,” in: Panter-Brick, S.K. (ed.), Soldiers and Oil: The Political Transformation of Nigeria (London, 1978), 166–97.Google Scholar
Van Donge, Jan Kees, and Liviga, Athumani J., “Tanzanian Political Culture and the Cabinet,” Journal of Modern African Studies 24 (1986), 619–39.Google Scholar
Villalón, Leonardo A., Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal: Disciples and Citizens in Fatick (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Von Freyhold, Michaela, Ujamaa Villages in Tanzania: Analysis of a Social Experiment (New York, 1979).Google Scholar
Weber, Cynthia, Simulating Sovereignty: Intervention, the State, and Symbolic Exchange (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Westerlund, David, Ujamaa na Dini: A Study of Some Aspects of Society and Religion In Tanzania, 1961-1977 (Stockholm, 1980).Google Scholar
Whitaker, Beth E., “Disjunctured Boundaries: Refugees, Hosts, and Politics in Western Tanzania,” PhD dissertation (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1999).Google Scholar
White, Luise, Speaking with Vampires: Rumor and History in Colonial Africa (Berkeley, 2000).Google Scholar
Wilson, Amrit, US Foreign Policy and Revolution: The Creation of Tanzania (London, 1989).Google Scholar
World Bank, The Economic Development of Tanganyika (Oxford, 1961).Google Scholar
World Bank, Tanzania: Social Sector Review (Washington DC, 1999).Google Scholar
Wright, Marcia, Strategies of Slaves and Women: Life Stories from East/Central Africa (New York, 1993).Google Scholar
Yeager, Rodger, Tanzania: An African Experiment (Boulder, 1989).Google Scholar
Zartman, I. William, Collapsed States: The Disintegration and Restoration of Legitimate Authority (Boulder, 1995).Google Scholar