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- Title
Tenuous Belonging: Citizenship and Democracy in Mozambique.
- Authors
Sumich, Jason
- Abstract
This article examines changing ideas of who constitutes a 'deserving' and 'full' citizen in Mozambique, from independence in 1975 to the present. I argue that the leadership of the ruling Frelimo Party attempted to occupy a position above society where it could determine the practices and behaviors that made one a loyal citizen and, conversely, those that made one an 'alien' or enemy. The adoption of liberal democracy in 1990 undermined the party's right to define what a 'true' or 'good' Mozambican is, but not the underlying structural grammar. Thus, the meaning of citizenship is increasingly a floating signifier. To be designated an 'outsider' is to be an enemy, but it is no longer clear who has the power to define who is a 'true' Mozambican and who is not.
- Subjects
POLITICAL leadership; CITIZENSHIP; FRELIMO; DEMOCRACY; LIBERALISM; POLITICAL parties
- Publication
Social Analysis, 2013, Vol 57, Issue 2, p99
- ISSN
0155-977X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3167/sa.2013.570206