Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T07:45:20.906Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Structural Adjustment and the Fragile Nation: the Demise of Social Unity in Tanzania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Tanzania is one of the few African countries that has remained relatively calm since independence. However, its long history of ethnic, racial, and religious cohesion has begun to fray as the Government attempts to reform its ailing economy in accordance with World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditionalities. This process offers an opportunity to explore the degree to which there is a causal link between liberal economic reform and social unity. This is especially relevant as many African régimes are implementing similar policy prescriptions in the form of structural adjustment programmes (SAPs), the terms of which often depend on the minimal financial leverage that African negotiators have vis-à-vis the advanced industrial countries of the North.1 York Bradshaw and Zwelakhe Tshandu have argued that ‘the burgeoning debt crisis may represent the “new dependency” for many African countries which cannot acquire capital from other sources besides the IMF and the World Bank.’

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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

1 The term ‘North’ refers throughout this article to the advanced industrialised countries, while ‘South’ refers to ‘developing’, ‘less-developed’, or third-world countries.

2 Bradshaw, York W. and Tshandu, Zwelakhe, ‘Foreign Capital Penetration, State Intervention, and Development in Sub-Saharan Africa’, in International Studies Quarterly (Guildford), 34, 2, 06 1990, p. 231.Google Scholar

3 van de Walle, Nicolas, ‘Review Essay: adjustment alternatives and alternatives to adjustment’, in African Studies Review (Atlanta), 37, 3, 12 1994, pp. 103–17.Google Scholar See also, Kayizzi-Mugerwa, Steve and Levin, Jorgen, ‘Adjustment and Poverty: a review of the African experience’, in African Development Review (Abidjan), 6, 2, 12 1994, pp. 139.Google Scholar

4 Ravenhill, John, ‘Adjustment with Growth: a fragile consensus’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), 26 2, 06 1988, pp. 179210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Cornia, Giovanni Andrea, van der Hoeven, Rolph, and Mkandawire, Thandika (eds.), Africa's Recovery in the 1990s: from stagnation and adjustment to human development (Basingstoke and New York, 1993).Google Scholar

6 Schatz, Sayre P., ‘Structural Adjustment in Africa: a failing grade so far’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies, 32, 4, 12 1994, p. 692.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Williams, Maurice, ‘The Role of Private Enterprise in Human Centered Development’, in Development (Rome), 2, 1994, p. 11.Google ScholarPubMed

8 Adekanye, J. 'Bayo, ‘Structural Adjustment, Democratization and Rising Ethic Tensions in Africa’, in Development and Change (London), 26, 2, 04 1995, pp. 355–74.Google Scholar According to Bienen, Henry and Gersovitz, Mark, ‘Consumer Subsidy Cuts, Violence, and Political Stability’, in Comparative Politics (New York), 19, 1, 10 1986, p. 25, ‘subsidy cuts may provoke discontent, but they do not appear to be more fundamental as a cause of instability than many other shortrun factors which are at work leading to social and political instability, not to say long-run trends in society’.Google Scholar

9 Wagao, Jumanne H., ‘Adjustment Policies in Tanzania, 1981–1989: the impact on growth, structure and human welfare’, in Van der Hoeven, Cornia, and Mkandawire, (eds.), op. cit. pp. 93115.Google Scholar

10 Tanganyika African National Union, The Arusha Declaration and TANU's Policy on Socialism and Self-Reliance (Dar es Salaam, 1967).Google Scholar

11 Ibid. p. 11.

12 Ministry of National Education, The Ministry of National Education Combined Annual Report for the Years 1970–1975 (Dar es Salaam, 1983), p. 2.Google Scholar

13 See Khalid, Abdallah, The Liberation of Swahili from European Appropriation (Nairobi, 1977), for more on this perspective as applied to Kenya.Google Scholar

14 Active participants in this debate have included Justinian Rweyemamu and Issa Shivji from Tanzania, Walter Rodney and Clive Thomas from Guyana, and Lionel Cliffe, John Saul, and Goran Hyden from the North. See Kenyanchui, Simon S. S., ‘Scholars' Conflicting Interpretations of Tanzanian Ujamaa: a review article’, in African Journal of Sociology (Nairobi), 3, 1, 05 1989, pp. 8493.Google Scholar

15 Rasmussen, Lissi, Christian-Muslim Relations in Africa: the cases of Northern Nigeria and Tanzania compared (London, 1993), p. 109.Google Scholar

16 Little attention was paid to the rôle of ujamma in mitigating ethnic tensions in Unesco, Two Studies on Ethnic Group Relations in Africa: Senegal and the United Republic of Tanzania (Paris, 1974).Google Scholar

17 Wagao, loc. cit. p. 99.

18 Change (Dar es Salaam), January 1993, p. 5.Google Scholar

19 Ibid. June-July 1994, p. 3.

20 Ibid.

21 Africa Confidential (London), 36, 15, 21 July 1995.Google Scholar

22 Uhuru (Dar es Salaam), 4 September 1993, and Wakati ni Huu (Dar es Salaam), 7–13 September 1993.Google Scholar

23 Research notes, Bruce Heilman, Bloomington, Indiana.

24 Mfanyakazi (Dar es Salaam), 25 June 1994.Google Scholar

25 See Shivji, Issa G., Tanzania: the legal foundations of the Union (Dar es Salaam, 1990),Google Scholar and Jumbe, Abdou, The Partner-ship - Tanganyika-Zanzibar Union: 30 turbulent years (Dar es Salaam, 1994).Google Scholar

26 Inter-Press Service, ‘Tanzania-Politics: Nyerere calls for resignation’, E-mail, 2 November 1994. Also, Barkan, Joel D., ‘Divergence and Convergence in Kenya and Tanzania: pressures for reform’, in Barkan, (ed.), Beyond Capitalism vs. Socialism in Kenya and Tanzania (Boulder and London, 1994), p. 34.Google Scholar

27 Mtikila, Christopher, Letter to the United Nations, E-mail, 15 December 1994.Google Scholar

28 This incident was widely reported in Kenya and Tanzania during April and May 1993.

29 Tripp, Aili Mari, ‘Local Organizations, Participation, and the State in Urban Tanzania’, in Hyden, Goran and Bratton, Michael (eds.), Government and Politics in Africa (Boulder and London, 1992), p. 238.Google Scholar

30 See Daily News (Dar es Salaam), 18, 22, and 25 09 1995, for reports of political violence in the country.Google Scholar

31 According to Singh, Gurnam, ‘Modernisation, Ethnic Upsurge and Conflict in the World’, in International Journal of Group Tensions (New York), 24, 4, Winter 1994, p. 406, ‘The decline of the ideology of territorial nation-state created a sort of vacuity wherein ethnicity is fast emerging as the most solid basis for political formation and its sustenance’.Google Scholar

32 Africa Confidential, 36, 23–24, 17 11 and 1 12 1995.Google Scholar

33 The Express (Dares Salaam), 26–28 10 1995, p. 8.Google Scholar

34 On 24 October 1995, the CUF cited ‘a chain of irregularities that have surfaced in the electoral process’, and the following day the CCM issued a formal complaint ‘against the chain of irregularities done during the electroal process [which]… led to a lot of confusion where by causing the elections not to be free and fair’. On 27 October 1995, a press release by the Netherlands Embassy ‘on behalf of the Heads of Mission of seventeen bilateral donor agencies’, noted ‘discrepancies in the compliation of the votes for the Presidency’.

35 Africa Confidential, 36, 24, 1 12 1995, p. 4.Google Scholar

36 See Sheriff, Abdul and Ferguson, Ed (eds.), Zanzibar Under Colonial Rule (London, 1991), passim.Google Scholar

37 Agence France Presse, E-mail, 14 March 1995.

38 Fukayama, Francis, The End of History and the Last Man (New York, 1992).Google Scholar

39 Adekanye, loc. cit. p. 367.