Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
A unified élite means the end of freedom. But when the groups of the élite… become a disunity, it means the end of the state. Freedom survives in [the] intermediate free zones.1 Any system that restrains [solidification of the élite] however slightly can only excite awe.2
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Page 528 note 3 Clignet and Foster, loc. cit. p. 357.
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Page 529 note 2 This observation for Malawi is based upon my service in that country during 1966–8 as an administrative officer in the Ministry of Economic Affairs. Cohn Baker agrees that Africanisation has been slow and incomplete, although he offers statistics for 1971–2 to show that the pace has recently accelerated. See ‘The Administrative Service of Malawi – a case study in Africanisation’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies, X, 4, 12 1972, pp. 543–60.Google Scholar
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