1st Edition

The Southern Sudan The Problem of National Integration

By Dunstan M. Wai Copyright 1973
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1972. The purpose of this book is to further understand the problems of the Southern Sudan, which have often been unfairly equated with the prevalent problems of national integration facing post-Colonial Africa. For greater understanding of the history and the contemporary manifestations of the conflict between North and South in the Sudan, the focus here is upon the generic aspects of this problem.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 The Southern Sudan: The Country and the People, Dunstan M. Wai; Chapter 3 The Southern Sudan Question, Abel Alier; Chapter 4 Arabism, Africanism, and Self-Identification in the Sudan, Muddathir 'Abd Al-Rahim; Chapter 5 The Black Arabs in Comparative Perspective: The Political Sociology of Race Mixture, Ali A. Mazrui; Chapter 6 On Economics and Regional Autonomy, Joseph U. Garang; Chapter 7 Can Secession Be Justified? The Case of the Southern Sudan, Peter Russell, Storrs McCall; Chapter 8 The Border Implications of the Sudan Civil War: Possibilities for Intervention, A. G. G. Gingyera-Pinycwa; Chapter 9 The Education of Southern Sudanese Refugees, Donald Denoon; Chapter 10 Political Trends in the Sudan and the Future of the South, Dunstan M. Wai;

    Biography

    Dunstan M. Wai is a student at St. John's College, Oxford. He was reading for a degree in Political Science at Makerere University when he won a St. John's/Trinity Junior Common Room Refugee Scholarship. While at Makerere he was elected member of the Guild Representative Council, and of the Guild Secretariat. He was also President of the Southern Sudanese Makerere Students' Union.