Wasta!: The Long Term Implications of Education Expansion and Economic Liberalization on Politics in Sudan
Mann, Laura (2014) ‘Wasta!: the Long Term Implications of Education Expansion and Economic Liberalization on Politics in Sudan’ Review of African Political Economy 41(142)
34 Pages Posted: 22 May 2015
Date Written: May 20, 2015
Abstract
By tracking the changing nature of wasta, or personal intermediation, in the Khartoum labour market, this paper examines the impact of Islamist policies on state–society relations in Khartoum, Sudan. It argues that economic liberalisation and higher education expansion weakened sectarian control over the economy, replacing the former institutionalised system of privilege with a much more decentralised, private and transnational structure. The conclusion asks whether these policies have laid the groundwork for long-term political transformation. While education expansion and liberalisation should theoretically allow a regime to broaden patronage networks, they may also reduce the capacity of both the regime and the private sector to exercise power and establish predictability outwards.
Keywords: Sudan, political economy, wasta, social networks, Islamism, higher education
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