The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar
<p>"The sea is the limit of my paddy"t. With this sentence, Andrianampoinimerina, a famous ruler of a<br />region on the highlands of Madagascar, expressed, at the turn of the XVIII and XIX century, the<br />desire to unify the island under his own political authority. Th...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Ledizioni
2016-10-01
|
Series: | Antropologia |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/752 |
_version_ | 1819160625297752064 |
---|---|
author | Marco Gardini |
author_facet | Marco Gardini |
author_sort | Marco Gardini |
collection | DOAJ |
description | <p>"The sea is the limit of my paddy"t. With this sentence, Andrianampoinimerina, a famous ruler of a<br />region on the highlands of Madagascar, expressed, at the turn of the XVIII and XIX century, the<br />desire to unify the island under his own political authority. The project was implemented only a<br />century later, with difficulty, by the French colonial conquest. Since then, the process of imposition<br />and extension of state sovereignty on the island has never stopped, emerging as a political field in<br />which different principles of legitimacy, old and new symbols of power and different forms of<br />political organization have been compared, overlapped and disputed. Even today the malagasy state<br />finds a number of difficulties in fully exercising its sovereignty on different areas of the country,<br />especially in some rural regions where armed groups of dahalo ( &#39;bandits&#39; in Malagasy) have added<br />to their &quot;classic&quot; cattle raids attacks on homes, trucks, taxi brousse and, in some cases, the extortion<br />of tributes from entire villages. Given the slowness and inefficiency of the government to take<br />charge of the matter, many feel that these armed groups are operating with the connivance of the<br />authorities or sectors of the army; an idea reinforced by the fact that the military tend not to leave<br />alive any of those who have been accused of being dahalo, as if they were getting rid of<br />inconvenient witnesses. This &quot;crisis of the dahalo&quot;, has driven the young people of some villages to<br />organize themselves, buy weapons and make their own justice at the risk of being confused with the<br />same bandits from whom they would like to defend themselves. Based on research conducted in<br />areas recently classified as &quot;red zones&quot; for the presence of dahalo, this article explores the<br />ambiguities and contradictions that emerge in the process of reconstitution of state sovereignty in<br />areas which have been economically and politically marginalized and it gives an account of how the<br />issue of security has entered on the political agenda and in the public debate of contemporary<br />Madagascar with increasing strength.</p> |
first_indexed | 2024-12-22T16:59:25Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-bc73f70ad67847e9aa3de7a3a722c002 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2281-4043 2420-8469 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-22T16:59:25Z |
publishDate | 2016-10-01 |
publisher | Ledizioni |
record_format | Article |
series | Antropologia |
spelling | doaj.art-bc73f70ad67847e9aa3de7a3a722c0022022-12-21T18:19:23ZengLedizioniAntropologia2281-40432420-84692016-10-0132 N.S618010.14672/ada2016752%p535The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in MadagascarMarco Gardini0Università degli studi di Milano Bicocca<p>"The sea is the limit of my paddy"t. With this sentence, Andrianampoinimerina, a famous ruler of a<br />region on the highlands of Madagascar, expressed, at the turn of the XVIII and XIX century, the<br />desire to unify the island under his own political authority. The project was implemented only a<br />century later, with difficulty, by the French colonial conquest. Since then, the process of imposition<br />and extension of state sovereignty on the island has never stopped, emerging as a political field in<br />which different principles of legitimacy, old and new symbols of power and different forms of<br />political organization have been compared, overlapped and disputed. Even today the malagasy state<br />finds a number of difficulties in fully exercising its sovereignty on different areas of the country,<br />especially in some rural regions where armed groups of dahalo ( &#39;bandits&#39; in Malagasy) have added<br />to their &quot;classic&quot; cattle raids attacks on homes, trucks, taxi brousse and, in some cases, the extortion<br />of tributes from entire villages. Given the slowness and inefficiency of the government to take<br />charge of the matter, many feel that these armed groups are operating with the connivance of the<br />authorities or sectors of the army; an idea reinforced by the fact that the military tend not to leave<br />alive any of those who have been accused of being dahalo, as if they were getting rid of<br />inconvenient witnesses. This &quot;crisis of the dahalo&quot;, has driven the young people of some villages to<br />organize themselves, buy weapons and make their own justice at the risk of being confused with the<br />same bandits from whom they would like to defend themselves. Based on research conducted in<br />areas recently classified as &quot;red zones&quot; for the presence of dahalo, this article explores the<br />ambiguities and contradictions that emerge in the process of reconstitution of state sovereignty in<br />areas which have been economically and politically marginalized and it gives an account of how the<br />issue of security has entered on the political agenda and in the public debate of contemporary<br />Madagascar with increasing strength.</p>https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/752africamadagascarpoliticacriminalità |
spellingShingle | Marco Gardini The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar Antropologia africa madagascar politica criminalità |
title | The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar |
title_full | The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar |
title_fullStr | The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar |
title_full_unstemmed | The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar |
title_short | The Limits of the Paddy: Political Centralization, Banditry, and Sovereignty in Madagascar |
title_sort | limits of the paddy political centralization banditry and sovereignty in madagascar |
topic | africa madagascar politica criminalità |
url | https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/antropologia/article/view/752 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT marcogardini thelimitsofthepaddypoliticalcentralizationbanditryandsovereigntyinmadagascar AT marcogardini limitsofthepaddypoliticalcentralizationbanditryandsovereigntyinmadagascar |