Boko Haram bibliography minor updates

I’ve added brief comments on four new pieces in the Boko Haram bibliography -  Adibe (2012); Agbiboa (2013); Idowu (2013); Mantzikos (2010).

About these ads
Posted in Politics | 1 Comment

The Northern Nigerian State of Emergency

My Boko Haram paper is lying dormant while I mark exams, and embark on the buying and selling of homes, and is in danger of being over-taken by events. I’ve been keeping up-to-date on the developments in the north-east of the country as best I can, given the difficulties of getting media reports. This is one of the most useful resources - a Google map of towns that are being claimed as under Boko Haram control; ones the Joint Task Force of the Federal army claims to have retaken; and other important sites. The map was created by a researcher at the Council for Foreign Relations, and their Africa in Transition blog has some details here. My annotated bibliography on Boko Haram is available here - I have a few papers to add to this and hope to make time soon – and the audio recording of talk in April on Boko Haram is available here.

Posted in Boundaries, Politics, Territory | Leave a comment

Planning for exclusion in Abuja

At Open Democracy, an interesting piece on the Nigerian capital of Abuja.

Nigeria, a nation deeply scarred by colonialism and years of civil war, took the decision in 1991 to build a new capital city at the country’s centre.

In an 1983 interview, the Minister of the Federal Capital Development Authority, Alhaji Iro Dan Musa claimed that the government wanted a capital city which “belonged to all Nigerians” best achieved by “starting afresh in Abuja”.

Abuja is Africa’s first modernist capital and follows in the tradition of other planned cities across the world, from Brasilia (Brazil), to Washington D.C. (USA) to Chandigarh (India). In contrast to Lagos the former capital of Nigeria, Abuja has been carefully planned to project a particular aesthetic to a global audience, inclusive of manicured lawns, un-congested roads, and buildings infused with a nouveau African-centeredness. In Abuja, the Nigerian government intended to build an African utopia, one which would represent a unified, independent Nigeria for the country’s fractured, inequal social groups. Yet despite grand, utopian plans for a new and modern capital, in planning and building Abuja an all too familiar pattern of exclusion and disparity has emerged.

My photo below gives some sense of how the city looks as the planners intended – the article has some images of things they would rather you didn’t see.

Various 061 (800x600)

Posted in Politics, Travel, urban/urbanisation | Leave a comment

Renditions rendered

Reblogged from geographical imaginations:

Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post

Many readers will know of various attempts made, several years ago, to map the CIA's extraordinary rendition programme.  One of the most innovative was artist-geographer Trevor Paglen's Terminal Air project (and the idea of (de)basing the travel agency in this way was taken up, in a different register, by Adel Abidin: see here).

Trevor and his collaborators produced a series of visualizations of the flight network between Guantanamo and various black sites, some in digital form (like Terminal Air) -- the image below is a screenshot of a remarkable animated sequence --

Read more… 412 more words

Derek Gregory on attempts to map rendition.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Peter Sloterdijk – Philosophical Temperaments

appPeter Sloterdijk’s little book Philosophical Temperaments: From Plato to Foucault is now out in English translation with Columbia University Press.

The chapter on Plato is available to read free online.

Posted in Michel Foucault, Peter Sloterdijk | Leave a comment

Parrhesia issue 16 out

Open access and available to download here. Includes essays by Graham Harman, Tristan Garcia, Quentin Meillassoux, Marie-Eve Morin on Jean-Luc Nancy, etc. (via Graham Harman’s blog)

Posted in Graham Harman, Jean-Luc Nancy, Quentin Meillassoux | Leave a comment

# PALESTINE /// The Right to the Ruin: Civilizational Absence in the Post-Nakba Landscapes

Reblogged from The Funambulist:

Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post

What is wrong with these pictures? Start maybe by looking at them all. The landscapes that they show are beautiful and seem to be almost untouched by humans. The problem is that they are taken where Palestinian villages used to exist before 1948. Five days ago was the 65th anniversary of the Nakba (the catastrophe in Arabic), the day that hundreds of thousands of Palestinians had to flee from their land when the State of Israel was established.

Read more… 476 more words

A good example fromThe Funambulist - a piece on the erasure of pre-1948 Palestinian villages.
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment