Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T12:54:19.711Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ravens Reconsidered: Raiding And Theft Among Tubu-Speakers In Northern Chad

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 July 2018

Abstract:

From the outside, northern Chad has long been seen as an area of lawlessness, defined primarily by its inhabitants’ alleged propensity for raiding and thieving. From the inside, northern Chad indeed appears as an area that thrives on a rhetoric of predation. This, however, is perhaps best understood not in terms of “crime,” but rather as a striving for personal autonomy, as a public denial of reciprocity in a context where notions of bounded moral community and indeed of long-term social strategies of exchange are not much in evidence.

Résumé:

Le Nord du Tchad a longtemps été considéré par les observateurs extérieurs comme une terre de non droit, définie principalement par le penchant supposé de ses habitants pour les rezzous et le vol. Localement, une certaine rhétorique de la prédation est également mise en avant pour expliquer les relations sociales externes, mais froid même internes, de la zone. Néanmoins, afin de mieux cerner ces pratiques et ces dynamiques historiques, il semble préférable de ne pas les analyser en premier lieu sous leurs aspects « criminels », mais davantage comme le pendant d’une aspiration à l’autonomie personnelle et du déni public de la réciprocité, dans un contexte où les notions de communautés et de stratégies d’échange à long terme ne sont que peu efficientes.

Type
Forum on Crime and Punishment
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2018 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, David. 1986. “Stock theft and the moral economy in colonial Kenya.” Africa 56 (4): 399416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asad, Talal. 1970. The Kababish Arabs: power, authority and consent in a nomadic tribe. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Barnes, Robert. 1999. “Marriage by capture.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 5 (1): 5773.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baroin, Catherine. 1985. Anarchie et cohésion sociale chez les Toubou: les Daza Késerda (Niger). Paris: MSH.Google Scholar
Baroin, Catherine. 1986. “Organisation territoriale, organisation sociale: la logique du système toubou.” Journal des africanistes 56 (2): 727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baroin, Catherine. 1991. “Dominant - dominé: complémentarité des rôles et des attitudes entre les pasteurs téda-daza et leurs forgerons.” In Forge et forgerons edited by Baroin, Catherine and Moñino, Y., 381391. Paris: Éditions de l’ORSTOM.Google Scholar
Baroin, Catherine. 2009. “La circulation et les droits sur le bétail, clés de la vie sociale chez les Toubou (Tchad, Niger).” Journal des africanistes 78 (1–2): 120–42.Google Scholar
Barth, Heinrich. 1890 [185758]. Travels and discoveries in North and Central Africa. London: Ward, Lock and Co.Google Scholar
Bercault, Olivier, and Brody, Reed. 2013. “La plaine des morts. Le Tchad de Hissène Habré, 1982–1990.” Human Rights Watch.Google Scholar
Berque, Jacques. 1970. “Les hilaliens repentis ou l’Algérie rurale au XVe siècle, d’après un manuscrit jurisprudentiel.” Annales. Économies, Sociétés, Civilisations 25 (5): 1325–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bodoumi, Ahmat Saleh. 2010. Tchad: 1960–1982. La victoire des révoltés. Témoignage d’un “enfant soldat”. N’Djamena: Centre al-Mouna.Google Scholar
Bonte, Pierre. 2000. “L’échange est-il universel?” L’Homme 154–5: 3965.Google Scholar
Brachet, Julien, and Scheele, Judith. 2015. “Les années écroulées. Vestiges, développement et autonomie à Faya-Largeau, Tchad.” L’Homme 215–6: 279306.Google Scholar
Brachet, Julien and Scheele, Judith. 2016. “A ‘despicable shambles’: labour, property and status in Faya-Largeau, northern Chad.” Africa 86 (1): 122–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brandily, Monique. 1988. “Les inégalités dans la société du Tibesti.” In Gens du roc et du sable. Les Toubous. Hommage à Charles et Marguerite Le Cœur edited by Baroin, Catherine, 3772. Paris: Éditions du CNRS.Google Scholar
Bruce-Lockhart, Jamie, and Wright, John. 2000. Difficult and dangerous roads. Hugh Clapperton’s travels in Sahara and Fezzan 1822–1825. London: Sickle Moon Books.Google Scholar
Buijtenhuijs, Robert. 1978. Le Frolinat et les révoltes populaires au Tchad (1965–1976). Paris: Mouton.Google Scholar
Buijtenhuijs, Robert. 1987. Le Frolinat et les guerres civiles au Tchad (1977–1984). Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Buijtenhuijs, Robert. 2001. “The Chadian Tubu: contemporary nomads who conquered a state.” Africa 71 (1): 149–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Capot-Rey, Robert. 1961. Borkou et Ounianga. Étude de géographie régionale. Algiers: Institut de recherches sahariennes.Google Scholar
Carbou, Henri. 1912. La région du Tchad et du Ouadaï. Paris: Ernest Leroux.Google Scholar
Chapelle, Jean. 1957. Nomades noirs du Sahara. Les Toubous. Paris: Plon.Google Scholar
Claudot, Hélène, and Hawad, 1982. “Coups et contre-coups: l’honneur en jeu chez les Touaregs.” Annuaire de l’Afrique du Nord 21: 793808.Google Scholar
Cordell, Dennis. 1977. “Eastern Libya, Wadai, and the Sanūsīya: A tarīqa and a trade route.” Journal of African History 18 (1): 2136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cordell, Dennis. 1985. “The Awlâd Sulaymân of Libya and Chad: power and adaptation in the Sahara and Sahel.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 19 (2): 319–43.Google Scholar
Debos, Marielle. 2008. “Fluid loyalties in a regional crisis: Chadian ‘ex-liberators’ in the Central African Republic.” African Affairs 107: 225–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Debos, Marielle. 2013. Le métier des armes au Tchad. Le gouvernement de l’entre-guerres. Paris: Karthala.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Djian, Georges. 1996 [191516]. Le Tchad et sa conquête, 1900–1914. Paris: L’Harmattan.Google Scholar
Dresch, Paul. 1989. Tribes, government and history in Yemen. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Dresch, Paul. 2012. “Aspects of non-state law: early Yemen and perpetual peace.” In Legalism: anthropology and history edited by Dresch, Paul and Skoda, Hannah, 145–72. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, Edward E. 1945. “The distribution of Sanusi lodges.” Africa 15 (4), 183–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fausto, Carlos. 1999. “Of enemies and pets: warfare and shamanism in Amazonia.” American Ethnologist 26 (4): 933–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrandi, Jean. 1930. Le centre africain français. Tchad – Borkou – Ennedi. Paris: Charles-Lavauzelle.Google Scholar
Finnis, John. 1985. “The authority of law in the predicament of contemporary social theory.” Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy 1: 115–37.Google Scholar
Fleisher, Michael. 2000. “Kuria cattle raiding: capitalist transformation, commoditization, and crime formation among an East African agro-pastoral people.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 42 (4): 745–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuchs, Peter. 1961. Die Völker der Südost Sahara – Tibesti, Borku, Ennedi. Wien: Wilhelm Baumüller.Google Scholar
Graeber, David. 2012. “On social currencies and human economies: some notes on the violence of equivalence.” Social Anthropology 20 (4): 411–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, David. 2003. “The ‘new’ imperialism: accumulation by dispossession.” Socialist Register (2003): 6387.Google Scholar
James, Wendy. 1977. “The Funj mystique: approaches to a problem of Sudan history.” In Text and Context. The Social Anthropology of Tradition edited by Jain, Ravindra, 95133. Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues.Google Scholar
Kelly, Raymond Case. 1985. The Nuer conquest: the structure and development of an expansionist system. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Lacey, Nicola. 2009. “Historicising criminalisation: conceptual and empirical issues.” Modern Law Review 72 (6): 936–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamond, Grant. 2007. “What is a crime?” Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 27 (4): 609–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lange, Dierk. 1977. Le Dîwân des Sultans du (Kânem-)Bornô: chronologie et histoire d’un royaume africain (de la fin du Xe siècle jusqu’à 1808). Wiesbaden: F. Steiner Verlag.Google Scholar
Lanne, Bernard. 1984. “Le Sud, l’État et la révolution.” Politique africaine 16: 3044.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1967. Les structures élémentaires de la parenté. Paris: Mouton.Google Scholar
Ledyard, John, and Lucas, Paul. 1804. Voyages de MM. Ledyard et Lucas en Afrique. Paris: Xhrouet.Google Scholar
Marshall, S. E., and Duff, A.. 1998. “Criminalization and sharing wrongs.” Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 11: 722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, B. G. 1969. “Kanem, Bornu and the Fazzān. Notes on the Political History of a Trade Route.” Journal of African History 10 (1): 1527.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melissaris, E. 2007. “The concept of appropriation and the law of theft.” Modern Law Review 70 (4): 581–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nachtigal, Gustav. 1879. Sahârâ und Sûdân: Ergebnisse sechsjähriger Reisen in Afrika. Erster Band: Tripolis, Fezzân, Tibesti und Bornû. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung.Google Scholar
Nachtigal, Gustav. 1881. Sahârâ und Sûdân: Ergebnisse sechsjähriger Reisen in Afrika. Zweiter Band: Borkû, Kânem, Bornû und Bagirmi. Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung.Google Scholar
Parry, Jonathan. 1986. The Gift, the Indian gift and the ‘Indian gift’.” Man 21 (3) : 453–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renault, François. 1982. “La traite des esclaves noirs en Libye au XVIIIe siècle.” Journal of African History 83 (2): 163–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reyna, Stephen P. 1990. Wars without end. The political economy of a precolonial state. Hanover: University Press of New England.Google Scholar
Rossi, Benedetta. 2015. “Kinetocracy: the government of mobility at the desert’s edge.” In Mobility makes states: migration and power in Africa edited by Vigneswaran, Darshan and Quirk, Joel, 149–68. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Sahlins, Marshall. 1961. “The segmentary lineage: an organization of predatory expansion.” American Anthropologist 63 (2): 322–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saïbou, I. 2010. Les coupeurs de route. Histoire du banditisme rural et transfrontalier dans le basin du lac Tchad. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Sassen, Saskia. 2010. “A savage sorting of winners and losers: contemporary versions of primitive accumulation.” Globalizations 7 (1–2): 2350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Serjeant, R. B. 1981. “A maqâmah on palm-protection (shirâhah).” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 40 (4): 307–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sneath, David. 2006. “Transacting and enacting: corruption, obligation and the use of monies in Mongolia.” Ethnos 71 (1): 89112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sweet, Louise. 1965. “Camel raiding of North Arabian Bedouin: a mechanism of ecological adaptation.” American Anthropologist 67: 1132–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spittler, Gerd. 1993. Les Touareg face aux sécheresses et aux famines: les Kel Ewey de l’Aïr. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Thiry, Jacques. 1995. Le Sahara libyen dans l’Afrique du nord médiévale. Leuven: Peeters.Google Scholar
Tisseron, Antonin. 2015. “Tchad: l’émergence d’une puissance régionale?” Institut Thomas More, note d’actualité 34.Google Scholar
Touati, Houari. 1996. “Le prince et la bête. Enquête sur une métaphore pastorale.” Studia islamica 83 (1): 101–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triaud, Jean-Louis. 1995. La légende noire de la Sanūsiyya. Une confrérie musulmane saharienne sous le regard français (1840–1930) . Paris: MSH.Google Scholar
Tubiana, Jérôme, and Gramizzi, Claudio. 2017. “Tubu trouble: state and statelessness in the Chad-Sudan-Libya triangle.” Small Arms Survey HSBA Working Paper 43.Google Scholar
al-Tûnsî, : El-Tounsy, , Oumar, Mohamed b.. 1851. Voyage au Soudan oriental. Le Ouadây. Paris: B. Duprat.Google Scholar
Vikør, Knut. 1985. “An episode of Saharan rivalry: the French occupation of Kawar, 1906.” International Journal of African Historical Studies 18 (4): 699715.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zeltner, Jean-Claude. 1992. Tripoli : carrefour de l’Europe et des pays du Tchad, 1500–1795. Paris: L’Harmattan.Google Scholar