Women and the State in Nigeria: the Case of the Federal Military Government 1984–85

1987 ◽  
pp. 13-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyne Dennis
Africa ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Hart

AbstractIn 1979 Nigeria's military government held the first general elections for fifteen years. The politicians then resumed power under a republican constitution. The National Party of Nigeria, a conservative coalition, narrowly won the elections from four other parties and virtually controlled the next elections in 1983. There were five election rounds: for the President, for nine-teen state governers, for the Senate, for the House of Representatives and for the state assemblies. Increases over the 1979 vote in the presidential round indicated some rigging. Results in the following rounds were incredible. The root cause was northern reluctance within the National Party to honour an agreement to a southern presidential candidate at the next elections in 1987 and southern competition for the 1987 nomination. After the elections the courts failed to redress the rigging and the President to purge corrupt Ministers. The military then overthrew the government and resumed control.


Author(s):  
Ian Taylor

Since the 1960s, there have been more than 200 coups—extra-constitutional or forced changes in government—in Africa, with around half of them being successful. The period between the 1960s and 1990s was characterized by Cold War machinations, economic crises, and the growing de-legitimization of many post-colonial regimes. The majority of coups were followed by the formation of some type of military government, but after this diverse outcomes resulted. ‘The military in African politics’ outlines the nature of military rule and why there were so many coups. The fragility of the state and its tenuous hold on legitimacy, accentuated by the behaviour of those in power, is of critical importance.


Author(s):  
Michael J. Seth

At its independence in 1948, South Korea was an impoverished, predominately agricultural state, and most of the industry and electrical power was in North Korea. It faced a devastating war from 1950 to 1953, and an unpromising and slow recovery in the years that followed. Then, from 1961 to 1996, South Korea underwent a period of rapid economic development, during which it was transformed into a prosperous, industrial society. During these years, its economic growth rates were among the highest in the world. Under the military government of Park Chung Hee (Pak Chǒng-hǔi), which came to power in 1961, the state gave priority to economic development, focusing on a combination of state planning and private entrepreneurship. Possessing few natural resources, it depended on a low wage, educated, and disciplined labor force to produce goods for exports. As wages rose, economic development shifted from labor to capital-intensive industries. Focusing initially on textiles and footwear, South Korean manufacturing moved into steel, heavy equipment, ships, and petrochemicals in the 1970s, and electronics and automobiles in the 1980s. Two major reforms under the administration of Syngman Rhee (Yi Sǔng-man, 1948–1961) helped prepare the way: land reform and educational development. However, it was the commitment to rapid industrialization by the military governments of Park Chung Hee and his successor, Chun Doo Hwan (Chǒn Tu-hwan), that brought about the takeoff. Industrialization was characterized by a close pattern of cooperation between the state and large family-owned conglomerates known as chaebǒls. This close relationship continued after the transition to democracy, in the late 1980s and 1990s, but after 1987, labor emerged as a major political force, and rising wages gave further impetus to the development of more capital-intensive industry. In 1996, South Korea joined the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, being internationally recognized as a “developed state.” Although living standards still lagged behind those of North America, Western Europe, and Japan, the gap was significantly narrowed. After 1996, its economic development slowed but was still high enough to achieve a per capita income comparable to the countries of Western Europe and to shift from a borrower of to an innovator in technology.


Author(s):  
Valdemar Sguissardi ◽  
João dos Reis Júnior

Estuda a trajetória do tema “Educação Superior” na Revista Brasileira de Estudos Pedagógicos (RBEP), editada pelo Inep desde 1944 até nossos dias. Ao fazê-lo, lança luzes sobre as diversas fases da vida dessa instituição responsável pela edição da RBEP, ao mesmo tempo que discorre sobre as vicissitudes por que passou a política educacional e pedagógica no âmbito do Estado e da sociedade civil no Brasil. O percurso histórico percorrido pela RBEP e pela temática da educação superior em suas páginas é periodizado em três momentos claramente definidos. No primeiro, enfoca-se o nascimento, a natureza e a consolidação da RBEP (1944-1964). No segundo (1964-1979), a forte presença do Estado na definição das políticas educacionais, com destaque para a reforma educacional orquestrada pelo governo militarautoritário. No terceiro (1980-1995), a presença marcante da sociedade civil, quando esta se redemocratizava e quando a produção intelectual tinha origem especialmente nos programas de pós-graduação em educação, que à época se consolidavam. Palavras-Chave: educação superior; artigo de periódico; Revista Brasileira de Estudos Pedagógicos (RBEP). Abstract Higher Education and its historical development at the Brasilian context are studied through the analysis of articles at the Revista Brasileira de Estudos Pedagógicos (RBEP), which has been published by Inep since 1944. Three main periods of analysis were proposed in this present study: 1st (1944-1964), in which the beginning and the consolidation of the RBEP were basically established; 2nd (1964-1979), in which the presence of the State in the definition of educational policies is stressed, as shown by the educational reform imposed by the military government; and the 3rd one (1980-1995) where happens the democratization of the civil society, in which the intellectual prodution was mainly developed in the graduate programs on Education. Keywords: higher education; periodic article; Revista Brasileira de Estudos Pedagógicos (RBEP).


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-170
Author(s):  
Leonardo Augusto de Andrade Barbosa

Abstract This paper analyzes reforms in election law introduced by the civil-military government instituted in Brazil following the 1964 coup-d’état. After a brief background on the issue, it focuses on the tenure of President Humberto de Alencar Castello Branco (April 1964 to March 1967), particularly on the modification of the ineligibilities legislation aimed at the state elections of 1965. The trajectory of Sebastião Paes de Almeida – an oppositionist representative who was prevented from running for the office of governor of Minas Gerais on the grounds of the newly enacted legislation – provides the opportunity to assess how democratic institutions worked and how political rights were interpreted under a dictatorial regime that paradoxically relied on elections as a legitimizing strategy.


1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harumi Befu

When village communities exist in the context of a larger political system, understanding of the system of control at the village level requires analysis both of the system of control imposed on the village by the state and also of that which has evolved within the community through centuries of its existence. These two systems, of course, cannot operate altogether independently of each other but must somehow be articulated with one another. The specific ways in which the two systems articulate differ from society to society. Nonetheless a perusal of the literature suggests a solution to the problem of articulation which is common to many societies. The solution apparently is to maintain a relatively autonomous village community over which the higher authority exercises limited control through certain key agents or agencies, as is, for example, the case with Imperial China, Thailand, Ceylon, and Greece. And this was indeed the solution for Japanese villages of the Tokugawa period, in spite of the tight and rigid control of the military government over the peasantry which historians make much of. (Since our discussion will proceed at a general level at which differences in administration between the Shogunate and daimiate governments are minor, both types of government will be simply referred to as “the government” or “governments” without distinction.)


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