Contact: Adrianne

Tucker

802-443-5629

satucker@middlebury.edu

Posted: February 20, 2003

MIDDLEBURY,

VT
- The ninth annual Middlebury College African Symposium, titled

“Power and the State in Africa: Negotiating the Future,” will

be held on Thursday, Feb. 27-Saturday, March 1. The symposium, which is

free and open to the public, will feature three lectures, a drumming and

dance workshop, a student-moderated panel and a performance by the Senegalese

song and dance group Gokh-bi System.

“In

previous years, these symposia have tackled topics important to the understanding

of Africa, such as ‘brain drain,’ pluralism, and gender and healthcare.

This year, we wanted to address politics, democracy and the future of

government in African states,” said Alice Quist, a symposium student

organizer. “Our speakers will be able to shed some light on the issues,”

she said.

According to the symposium faculty advisor, Assistant Professor of Sociology

and Anthropology David Eaton, organizers of this year’s event wanted to

bring scholars to campus to focus on some of Africa’s most pressing problems

of governance today-ethnic conflicts, struggles over resources and vulnerabilities

in profoundly unequal international systems-and how they can be addressed

more fairly and effectively in the future.

“Capacities

for solutions to these problems lie not only within African states but

also beyond them,” noted Eaton. “Each of our guests is uniquely

qualified to speak to how such states function in relation to other institutions

and domains of power,” he said.

On Thursday, Feb. 27, from 4:30-6 p.m. the opening lecture, titled “The

Future of Africa Through the Lens of the Past,” will be presented

by John Spencer, Middlebury professor emeritus of history and College

trustee, in the conference room of the Robert A. Jones House on Hillcrest

Road, off College Street (Route 125 W). Refreshments will be served.

Before pursuing his doctorate in African studies from Columbia University,

Spencer lived and worked in Africa in several capacities over a period

of five years: he served as a fellow with the Institute of Current World

Affairs in East Africa, a research associate for the University of Nairobi,

and a program officer at the Ford Foundation for eastern, northern and

southern Africa. In 1967, he spent six weeks as a Peace Corps evaluator

in Gambia, Senegal and Mauritania, and in 1994, was an official election

observer in the South African elections. His book, “The Kenya African

Union” (1985), remains the standard work on the subject. As an historian

of Kenya’s political landscape in the years leading to independence, Spencer

has shown how broad-based and sometimes ethnically identified popular

movements shook the colonial state and laid foundations for post-colonial

national identity.

On Friday, Feb. 28, two lectures, “West African Conflicts and Prospects

for Resolution,” by William Reno, Northwestern University associate

professor of political science; and “Rethinking the African State

in Pan-African Perspective,” by Guy Martin, visiting lecturer of

political science at Georgia State University and adjunct professor of

political science at Spelman College, will follow back to back from 4-6

p.m., both in the Jones House conference room on Hillcrest Road. Refreshments

will be served.

William Reno has taught at the University of Wisconsin, the University

of Iowa, Hamilton College, Florida International University and, since

1999, Northwestern. His areas of expertise cover such topics as African

politics, ethnicity and nationalism, democratization, comparative politics

and the politics of revolutions. He is the author of “Corruption

and State Politics in Sierra Leone” (Cambridge, 1995), and “Warlord

Politics in African States” (Lynn Rienner, 1998). His current projects

focus on the politics of vigilantism in Nigeria and what he terms the

“mysterious” absence of revolutionary or reformist organizations.

Another project is a broad comparative study-taking him throughout Africa

and the newly independent republics of the former Soviet Union-that seeks

to explain why some communities and groups refrain from fighting when

conditions are thought to promote conflict. According to Eaton, Reno’s

influential work on warlord politics and weak states in West Africa shows

that the terrible conflicts that have recently wracked parts of this region-especially

in Liberia and Sierra Leone-have not been chaotic but instead have followed

a clear logic: the exploitation of local resources and the pursuit of

international commerce by coalitions of strongmen, business people and

local fighters.

Guy

Martin, who will give the second of the two talks on Friday, earned his

doctorate in 1982 from Indiana University. He has taught African politics

and international relations at various advanced diplomatic training institutions

in Africa, such as the International Relations Institute of Cameroon,

Yaounde; Institute of Diplomacy and International Studies, University

of Nairobi; University of the Western Cape, South Africa, and in the United

States at Clark Atlanta University; The American University; the University

of Virginia and New York University. Martin has written widely on African

politics and international relations. His book “Africa in World Politics:

A Pan-African Perspective” was published by Africa World Press in

2002. Martin’s extensive studies of the African nation-state in crisis

propose Pan-African alliances and regional integration as a way forward

in a global economic system dominated by other powers.

On Saturday, March 1, from 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., a student-led panel discussion

will be held in the Jones House conference room, on Hillcrest Road. Introduced

by Visiting Assistant Professor in Sociology/Anthropology Michael Sheridan

and moderated by Middlebury College senior Kudzai Zvoma of Zimbabwe, a

panel comprised of Spencer, Reno, Martin and three students-sophomore

Anywhere Sikochi of Zimbabwe, and juniors Leah Okollu of Kenya, and Paul

Opare-Addo of Ghana-will further discuss themes brought up at the previous

two days’ events. Lunch during the panel discussion will be offered on

a first-come, first-served basis.

On Saturday afternoon, from 2-3:30 p.m., a drumming and dance workshop

will be offered by Gokh-bi System, a Massachusetts-based Senegalese performance

group that combines traditional and contemporary music and dance forms,

in Ross Lounge on the third floor of the Milliken Dormitory, off Route

125 W.

From 8-10 p.m. that evening, the Gokh-bi System will conclude the 2003

African symposium with a performance in the Social Space of the McCullough

Student Center on Old Chapel Road, off Route 30. The five-person group’s

performances reclaim the African roots of hip-hop, bringing together the

ancient tradition of the troubadour storytellers known as “griots”

with politically savvy, uniquely Senegalese rap traditions. With members

from the Jola, the Serer and the Wolof peoples, the Gokh-bi System-literally

meaning, “neighborhood system” in the Wolof language-performs

globally aware music in five languages. Their performance style, which

they call “Ekonting Rap,” combines traditional drums, ekonting-a

string instrument from southern Senegal-and urban and village dance styles.

All

events are free and open to the public. For more information, contact

symposium student organizer Alice Quist at 802-443-6800, or by e-mail

at aquist@middlebury.edu.


A listing of symposium events follows:

African

Symposium “Power and the State in Africa: Negotiating the Future”

Event Listing

Thursday, Feb. 27 through Saturday, March 1

All events are free and open to the public.

Thursday,

Feb. 27

4:30-6 p.m. Opening lecture - refreshments will be served

“The Future of Africa Through the Lens of the Past,” by John

Spencer, Middlebury professor emeritus of history and College trustee.

An historian of Kenya’s political landscape in the years leading to independence,

Spencer has shown how broad-based and sometimes ethnically identified

popular movements shook the colonial state and laid foundations for post-colonial

national identity.

Robert A. Jones House conference room, on Hillcrest Road, off College

Street (Rte 125).


Friday,

Feb. 28

4-6 p.m. Two lectures, back to back - refreshments will be

served

“West African Conflicts and Prospects for Resolution,” by William

Reno, Northwestern University associate professor of political science.

Reno’s work on warlord politics and weak states in West Africa shows that

recent conflicts in parts of this region followed a clear logic: the exploitation

of local resources and the pursuit of international commerce by coalitions

of strongmen, business people and local fighters.

Robert A. Jones House conference room, on Hillcrest Road, off College

Street (Rte 125).

“Rethinking

the African State in Pan-African Perspective,” by Guy Martin, visiting

lecturer of political science at Georgia State University and adjunct

professor of political science at Spelman College. Martin’s studies of

the African nation-state in crisis propose Pan-African alliances and regional

integration as a way forward in a global economic system dominated by

other powers.

Robert A. Jones House conference room, on Hillcrest Road, off College

Street (Rte 125).


Saturday,

March 1

11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Student-moderated panel discussion - lunch

on a first-come, first-served basis

Panelists John Spencer, Middlebury professor emeritus of history and College

trustee; William Reno, Northwestern University associate professor of

political science; Guy Martin, visiting lecturer of political science

at Georgia State University and adjunct professor of political science

at Spelman College; and four Middlebury College students from Ghana, Kenya

and Zimbabwe will further discuss themes brought up at the previous two

days’ symposium events.

Robert A. Jones House conference room, on Hillcrest Road, off College

Street (Rte 125).

2-3:30

p.m. Workshop - Senegalese drumming and dance

The Massachusetts-based Senegalese performance group Gokh-bi System, which

combines traditional and contemporary music and dance forms, will offer

a drumming and dance workshop.

Ross Lounge on the third floor of the Milliken Dormitory, off College

Street (Rte 125).

8-10 p.m. Senegalese song and dance performance

The Massachusetts-based Senegalese song and dance group Gokh-bi System

will offer a song and dance performance. With members from the Jola, the

Serer and the Wolof peoples, the group’s performances reclaim the African

roots of hip-hop, bringing together the ancient tradition of the troubadour

storytellers known as “griots” with politically savvy, uniquely

Senegalese rap traditions.

Social Space of the McCullough Student Center on Old Chapel Road, off

Rte 30.

For

more information, contact symposium student organizer Alice Quist at 802-443-6800,

or by

e-mail at aquist@middlebury.edu.