Tribe or nationality? the Sudanese diaspora and the Kenyan Nubis

Tribe or nationality? the Sudanese diaspora and the Kenyan Nubis

Author: 
Johnson, Douglas H.
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Eastern African Studies
Source: 
Journal of Eastern African Studies, vol. 3, no. 1 March 2009, pp. 112-131
Abstract: 

The settlement of Sudanese soldier colonists throughout British East Africa was a legacy of colonial expansion and pacification. These settlements were developed from the institution of military slavery, which was marked by a close association of slave soldiers with the state and the isolation of military slave communities from the general populace. But once pacification was complete new policies representing new interests made the presence of these non-indigenous Africans redundant. Terms of settlement altered after World War One, and the right of Sudanese, or Nubis, to remain in their original settlements came under attack. The largest, and most problematic, Sudanese colony in Kenya was the former military encampment of Kibera, on the edge of Nairobi. Sudanese claimed that land had been granted to them as a community in perpetuity in lieu of a pension, and in recognition for their services to the Crown

Language: 

CITATION: Johnson, Douglas H.. Tribe or nationality? the Sudanese diaspora and the Kenyan Nubis . : Taylor & Francis , . Journal of Eastern African Studies, vol. 3, no. 1 March 2009, pp. 112-131 - Available at: https://library.au.int/tribe-or-nationality-sudanese-diaspora-and-kenyan-nubis-3