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Title
The role of political elites in nation-building in contemporary Ethiopia, 1960-2020 |
Date
2024 |
Author(s)
Alene, G.A. |
Contributor(s)
Abbink, G.J.; Hosli, M.O.; Dekker, M. (Committee member); Biezen, I.C. (Committee member); Hout, W. (Committee member); O'Malley, A.M. (Committee member); Erk, J.G. (Committee member); Leiden University |
Abstract
This thesis is about the role of elites in Ethiopia's nation-building process, 1960-2020. The study aims to answer questions regarding the formation, manoeuvering and circulation of elites. Using a combination of theoretical notions on elite circulation and elite bargaining as conceptual framework, the research employed mixed methods, including in-depth interviews and document analysis. The trajectory of Ethiopian state formation is analyzed, highlighting elites' evolving nature and characteristics across different regimes. From the imperial regime via the Derg and EPRDF regimes to today's PP rule, changes in power structures, ideologies, and socioeconomic dynamics have influenced elite composition and behaviour. Various dimensions and instruments of nation-building like economic integration, cultural integration, political centralization, and the establishment of effective state institutions are discussed. It is concluded that successive governments struggled to effectively utilize these instruments. It resulted in fragmentation, polarization, and authoritarianism, as key challenges were not met, including the failure to establish a compelling ideology and unifying national symbols, to provide overall public goods, to further civil society, or develop overarching language and education policies. The study proposes recommendations to address these challenges to nation-building, including elite reconfiguration, fostering consensus among ruling elites and stakeholders, and reducing the dominance of politicized ethno-elites. - ASC ' Publicaties niet-programma gebonden |
Subject(s)
Elites and politics; Elite circulation; Elite bargain; Nation-building; Ethiopia |
Language
en |
Type of publication
Doctoral Thesis; info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis; Text |
Format
application/pdf |
Identifier
isbn:9789464735000; lucris-id:1305239880 |
Repository
Leiden - University of Leiden
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Added to C-A: 2024-06-12;10:15:43 |
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