津巴布韦和博茨瓦纳酋长与 "臣民 "之间不断变化的关系

Norbert Musekiwa, B. Manatsha
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摘要

文章从历史角度分析了津巴布韦和博茨瓦纳酋长、"臣民 "和国家之间不断变化的关系。文章采用完全定性的方法,回顾了已发表和未发表的资料来源。文章采用了三个相互关联的理论:官僚主义、法律多元化和政治裙带关系。非洲酋长制早于殖民时期,尽管殖民时期从根本上改变了这一制度。文章认为,在殖民时期的津巴布韦和博茨瓦纳,酋长被官僚化,成为国家公职人员。这削弱了他们的力量,损害了他们与 "臣民 "之间的古老关系。为了应对这种错综复杂的局面,酋长们依靠与殖民地国家及其 "臣民 "的客户关系发展壮大。殖民国家建立了一个法律双轨制。在法律双轨制中,酋长作为其 "臣民 "与国家之间的中间人发挥着至关重要的作用。例如,他们负责收税,维护法律和秩序。在后殖民时代的津巴布韦和博茨瓦纳,酋长比其 "臣民 "更需要对国家和执政党负责。在这两个国家,国家可以任命、承认、取消承认酋长,也可以罢免酋长。酋长们经常抱怨国家对他们的压制,但这是可以理解的,因为他们从国家那里得到了保护和好处。
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Changing Relations Between Chiefs and ‘Subjects’ in Zimbabwe and Botswana
The article historically analyses the changing relations between chiefs, ‘subjects’ and the state in Zimbabwe and Botswana. Entirely qualitative, it reviews published and unpublished sources. The article utilises three interrelated theories: bureaucracy, legal pluralism, and political clientelism. African chieftainship predates the colonial period, although this era has fundamentally altered it. The article argues that in colonial Zimbabwe and Botswana, chiefs were bureaucratised and became state functionaries. This weakened them and compromised the age-old relations with their ‘subjects’. To navigate this intricate situation, chiefs thrived on their clientelistic relations with the colonial state and their ‘subjects’. The colonial state created a legal dual system. The chiefs played a critical role as the intermediaries between their ‘subjects’ and the state in a legal dual system. For instance, they collected taxes and maintained law and order. In postcolonial Zimbabwe and Botswana, chiefs have also become more accountable to the state and ruling parties than their ‘subjects’. In both countries, the state appoints, recognises, de-recognises and can depose a chief. Chiefs often complain of state’s subjugation, but this is understandable given the protection and benefits they receive from the state.
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