
Contents
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Fixers-in-Chief: The Everyday Life of Paramounts Fixers-in-Chief: The Everyday Life of Paramounts
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The Politics and Territory of Chiefly Succession The Politics and Territory of Chiefly Succession
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Exploiting Local Resources Exploiting Local Resources
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Fiscal Regulation, Electoral Politics, and Dynastic Strategies Fiscal Regulation, Electoral Politics, and Dynastic Strategies
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Postwar Reconstruction and Decentralization Postwar Reconstruction and Decentralization
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Six Paramount Chiefs, Land, and Local-National Politics in Sierra Leone
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Published:March 2018
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Abstract
In chapter six, Ferme shows how, in Sierra Leone as in Zimbabwe, local rulers ground the present in a reconfigured past. Under British colonialism, these rulers, who were often locked in power struggles with one another, were given the authority to collect taxes and became an integral element in ensuring the institutional stability of the colonial state; over time, some of them also merged into the modernizing elite of the country. In recent decades, under the impact of the Washington Consensus and structural adjustment, chiefship and the customary have asserted themselves once again in many parts of the country, seizing the opportunities wrought by devolution to take up new economic roles. What is more, emergent forms of “customary” authority – like so-called “American chiefs,” who have lived abroad and are now expected to “bring development” to their communities -- have become part of the labile, expanding landscape of local sovereignty.
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