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The Middle Class in Mozambique
The State and the Politics of Transformation in Southern Africa
Offers an examination of an African middle class, demonstrating how it is both bound to the state and alienated from it.
Jason Sumich (Author)
9781108460712, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 24 September 2020
191 pages
23 x 15.3 x 1 cm, 0.28 kg
In recent years, the growth of a middle class has been a key feature of the 'Africa Rising' narrative. Here, Sumich explores the formation of this middle class in Mozambique, answering questions about the basis of the class system and the social order that gives rise to it. Drawing extensively on his fieldwork, Sumich argues that power and status in dominant party states like Mozambique derives more from the ability to access resources, rather than from direct control of the means of production. By considering the role of the state, he shows how the Mozambican middle class can both be bound to a system they benefit from and alienated from it at the same time, as well as exploring the ways in which the middle classes attempt to reproduce their positions of privilege and highlighting the deep uncertain future that they face.
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
2. Origins
3. Asendance
4. Collapse
5. Democracy
6. Decay
7. 2016, concluding thoughts
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Regional government [JPR], Society & culture: general [JF], Society & social sciences [J], African history [HBJH]