State Building, Rural Development, and the Making of a Frontier Regime in Northeastern Ethiopia, C. 1944?75
State Building, Rural Development, and the Making of a Frontier Regime in Northeastern Ethiopia, C. 1944?75
Combining a set of grey literature and primary sources, this article analyses the rise and fall of the sultanate of Awsa, northeastern Ethiopia, between 1944 and 1975. Ali Mirah exploited the typical repertoires of a frontier regime to consolidate a semi-independent Muslim chiefdom at the fringes of the Christian empire of Ethiopia. Foreign investors in commercial agriculture provided the sultanate and its counterparts within the Ethiopian state with tangible and intangible resources that shaped the quest for statecraft in the Lower Awash Valley.
CITATION: Puddu, Luca. State Building, Rural Development, and the Making of a Frontier Regime in Northeastern Ethiopia, C. 1944?75 . : Cambridge University Press , 2016. The Journal of African History, Vol. 57, No. 1, 2016, pp. 93-113 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frstate-building-rural-development-and-making-frontier-regime-northeastern-ethiopia-c-194475-0