Transforming Sudan: Decolonization, Economic Development, and State Formation

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Product Details
Price
$132.00
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Publish Date
Pages
194
Dimensions
6.43 X 9.48 X 0.65 inches | 0.91 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781107172494

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About the Author
Alden Young is an Assistant Professor of African History and the Director of the Program in Africana Studies at Drexel University, Philadelphia. He was previously a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Africana Studies Department at the University of Pennsylvania and holds a Ph.D. in History from Princeton University, New Jersey.
Reviews
'Today, a technocratic, economistic vision of a modern Sudan is a half-remembered dream. Alden Young's superb book - a combination of political economy and cultural history - brings into focus the important but neglected story of how the country was once a model of planned development, led by an elite of Sudanese and British economists.' Alex DeWaal, Tufts University, Massachusetts
'This is a compelling study of the imaginative, destructive projects of economic planning. Alden Young explains how officials in late colonial and independent Sudan came to imagine 'the economy' as a particular, measurable, phenomenon; how they sought to transform it through schemes of development - and how calamitous the consequences of those policies were for the people of Sudan. This book makes a major contribution to our understanding of Sudan's history - and provides a salutary lesson for planners everywhere.' Justin Willis, Durham University
'Young genuinely advances the literature on decolonization, development, and state formation. Transforming Sudan belongs on the bookshelf of every scholar of these related fields and will be of great interest to African and Middle Eastern historians, too.' Cyrus Schayegh, H-IslamInAfrica
'... [Alden Young] offers an insightful and valuable history of how political choices shaped the creation of national statistics and how the implementation of those statistics necessarily constrained the economic imaginaries of Sudanese leaders. One great contribution of his book is to show just how important a vision of limitless economic growth was to post-colonial Sudanese officials.' Stephen Macekura, Diplomatic History
'A series of crises in Sudan, which in the 2000s saw the country being discussed in the company of countries such as Rwanda and Somalia, is often explained as the result of old, lingering ethnic and religious hatreds. But Alden Young offers a well-researched and compelling alternative explanation, arguing that an 'economizing logic' that became the 'policy making lens' in Sudan (p. 10) is to blame.' Jessica Watson, Survival
'... the book powerfully illuminates how discussions regarding economic policy cannot be disentangled from broader questions of meaning of nationalism and legitimate political order as well as how political and economic marginalization is rationalized with purportedly neutral justifications.' Zhe Yu Lee, Journal of Economic Geography