State Culture and Development in Botswana and Zimbabwe

State Culture and Development in Botswana and Zimbabwe

Author: 
Maundeni, Zibani
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Modern African Studies
Source: 
Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 40, Number 1, pp. 105-132, 2002
Abstract: 

This article makes two major claims. The first is that independent Botswana was able to generate and sustain a type of developmental state because of the presence of an indigenous initiator state culture that was preserved by the Protectorate state and was inherited by the post-colonial state elites. The second is that the non-emergence of the developmental state in post-colonial Zimbabwe is explained by the presence of a non-initiator indigenous state culture which was preserved by the Rhodesian colonial state and was inherited by the post-colonial state elites. The article briefly reviews the literature, analyses the Tswana and Shona pre-colonial state cultures, and shows that these were preserved by the colonial states and inherited by the nationalist politicians.

Language: 
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CITATION: Maundeni, Zibani. State Culture and Development in Botswana and Zimbabwe . : Taylor & Francis Group , . Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 40, Number 1, pp. 105-132, 2002 - Available at: https://library.au.int/state-culture-and-development-botswana-and-zimbabwe-3