1st Edition

Stanleyville An African Urban Community Under Belgian Administration

By Valdo Pons Copyright 1969
    386 Pages
    by Routledge

    386 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1969, this is a study of the Congolese community of Kinsangani (formerly Stanleyville), as it was in 1952-3 under Belgian administration. It pays particular attention to the tribal heterogeneity of the community, and to the processes of absorption of urban-dwellers who made up substantial proportions of the population. Although by comparison with Kinshasa and Lubambashi, Kisangani was a minor boom-town and by far the largest and most diversified urban centre in a vast and varied region. The book analyses the diversity and growth of the community and traces some of the many social implications for day to day life of ethnic heterogeneity and rapid population increase, developing concepts of cleavage and solidarity in changing urban communities in Southern and Central Africa. It emphasizes similarities as well as differences in the varied patterns and processes of African urbanization.

    Part 1: Introduction

    1. Scope and Methodology

    Part 2: The Context of Social Relations

    2. The Nature of the Town and of its African Community

    3. Demographic and Social Selection

    4. Ethnic Colonies 5. Immigrants and Differentiated Neighbourhoods

    Part 3: The Nature of Social Relations

    6. Neighbourhood Relations

    7. The Social Relations of Three Men from Avenue 21

    8. Relations Between the Sexes

    Part 4: Summary and Conclusions

    9. Avenue 21 and the Wider Community. Appendices.

    Biography

    Valdo Pons