http://us.macmillan.com/statefragilitystateformationandhumansecurityinnigeria/MojúbàolúOlúfúnkéOkome
State Fragility, State Formation, and Human Security in Nigeria
Mojúbàolú Olúfúnké Okome is Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College, CUNY, USA and past Women's Studies Program Director as well as past Deputy Chair for Graduate Studies in the Department of Political Science at Brooklyn College. She is also past President of the African Studies Research and Forum. In 2000, Mojubaolu was one of three co-chairs of the New York State delegation to the National Summit on Africa, and led the second-largest delegation to the Summit in Washington, DC. She co-edited with Olufemi Vaughan, Transnational Africa and Globalization and West African Migrations: Transnational and Global Pathways in a New Century (2012) and authored A Sapped Democracy: The Political Economy of the Structural Adjustment Program and the Political Transition in Nigeria, 1983-1993 (1998), as well as various journal articles and book chapters in the areas of her research interests. She is the founder and Editor of the online peer reviewed journal Ìrìnkèrindò: a Journal of African Migration and co-founder and until Spring 2010, one of three Co-editors of Jenda: Journal of African Culture and Women Studies.
Table of Contents:
1. State Failure, Civil Society, and 'Uncivil Society': Concepts and Outline2. Cooperative Investment and Credit societies in Southwest Nigeria
3. From 'Area-Boyism' to 'Junctions and Bases': Social Order and Violence in Lagos Island
4. State Failure and the Niger Delta
5. Radical Ethnic Actors and Militias
6. Conflict Management and Peace-Building Capacities of State and Non-State Actors
7. Gendered States: State Failure, Gender, and the Women's Rights Movement
8. Women in 'Traditional' / Local-Level Governance
9. Local Government and Community Self-Help Organisations
10. Contradictions in the Public Sphere: The Media
11. Churches as a (Failed?) Alternative

No comments:
Post a Comment