Description |
1 online resource (372 p.) |
Note |
Description based upon print version of record. |
Contents |
Cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Notes on the Authors -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1 -- Revolutions that Enslave Others: Exposing the Dark Side of Slave 4.0 in "Postsovereignity" Twenty-First Century Africa -- Introduction -- Slave 4.0: Twenty-first century Africans stepping onto the point of no return -- Enslaved through discourses on efficiency: The Fourth Industrial Revolution -- Predatory sovereignty and global patriarchs of the Global North -- Chapter outlines -- References |
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Chapter 2 -- African Sovereignty at Stake: Technologies of Enslavement and Destruction in Twenty-First Century Africa -- Introduction -- Technologies of capture and the risk of disappointment cycles in Africa -- Even slaves were enhanced for the benefit of slave masters: Africans' new debt trap in the form of mind enhancement software traps -- Parallels between the historical enslavement and new forms of enslavement -- Even slave masters needed to monitor and surveil their human properties: Becoming shambolic with invasive technologies -- Conclusion -- References |
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Chapter 3 -- Missionaries that "Muted" God: Gagging the Voices of African Sovereigns While Enslaving and Colonising Africans -- Introduction -- Guerrilla missionaries who challenged God's sovereignty -- Defiling holy places in Africa: Engraving colonialists in African sacred places -- Deconstructing African sovereignty in the absence of God's voice -- Quietly grabbing African land while inserting the Fourth Industrial Revolution -- The missionaries of disaster and revolutions of poverty in Africa: The logics of Pachamama |
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It's not just land deals but there are many deals: Networking deals, African minds-capturing deals and human reengineering deals in slave 4.0 -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4 -- Operation Dudula, Xenophobic Vigilantism and Sovereignty in Twenty-First Century South Africa -- Introduction -- Kuwanda huuya : Lessons from African exogamy and the Dudula brigade's retreat inwards -- Historical context of South African vigilantism -- Operation Dudula and its motives -- The emergence of Operation Dudula -- Operation Dudula and its consequences -- Theorising xenophobic vigilantism -- Conclusion |
Bibliography |
References -- Chapter 5 - Precolonial African Economic Sovereignty: A Critical Analysis of the Utility of Indigenous Knowledge Systems in Achieving Economic Growth in Africa -- Introduction -- Indigenous knowledge systems -- IKS and agriculture -- Mining and trade among Africans -- The slave trade and its implications on African economic sovereignty -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6 - Environmental and Economic Sovereignty through African Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Insights from Mashonaland West, Zimbabwe -- Introduction -- Conceptualization of terms -- Study area and methodology |
Note |
Harnessing of IKS in adaptation strategies |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Ethnoscience.
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Slavery.
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Sovereignty.
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sovereignty. |
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Ethnoscience |
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Slavery |
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Sovereignty |
Added Author |
Mawere, Munyaradzi.
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Other Form: |
Print version: Nhemachena, Artwell Sovereignty Becoming Pulvereignty Oxford : Langaa RPCIG,c2022 9789956552818 |
ISBN |
9789956552825 (electronic bk.) |
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9956552828 (electronic bk.) |
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9789956552818 |
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