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University of California Press

About the Book

This masterful synthesis explains how Africa has come to be a land torn by incessant conflict among its impoverished peoples and countries, a continent living through the gravest social revolution of its history, experiencing the world's fastest demographic growth. Weaving together four major themes—population, political power, the peasantry, and the new growth of the cities—Coquery-Vidrovitch demonstrates the need to recognize the extremely complex heritage of African societies if one is to understand the present or act upon the future of the continent.

About the Author

Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch is Professor of History at the University of Paris. She is the author and editor of numerous books on historical and contemporary Africa.

Table of Contents

LIST OF MAPS 
PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION 

PART I. AFRICAN DEMOGRAPHIC GROWTH: THE MOST ERRATIC DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORY
1. Demography, Ecology, and History 
2. The Effects of the Atlantic Slave Trade
3. Demography and Colonization

PART II. THE STATE: FROM CHIEFSHIP TO MILITARY POPULISM
4. Precolonial Rule: From the Rural Community to the State 
5. State Resistance to Colonial Control 
6. From Chiefdom to Tribalism: The Contradictions of Government
 
PART III. THE LAND: FROM SUBSISTENCE TO SCARCITY 
7. Peasant Societies: Endurance and Change
8. Capitalism or Socialism? Recent Developments in the Rural Sector 
9. Revolt and Resistance, Collaboration and Assimilation

PART IV. LABOR AND THE CITY: AFRICA'S FUTURE
10. Workers: From Labor Migration to Proletarianization
11. Labor Action: Social Protest to the End of World War II 
12. Trade Unionism and Nationalism: The Slow Growth of Sociopolitical Movements 
13. Cities, Social Classes, and the Informal Sector: The Future of Poverty
CONCLUSION 

APPENDIX: THE SOURCES OF AFRICAN DEMOGRAPHIC HISTORY 
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX

Reviews

"Coquery-Vidrovitch's book is not merely good; it's marvellous. It represents the finest product of the Annales tradition of structural history."—Immanuel Wallerstein