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    Historical trajectories of ethnic conflicts in Busoga, Uganda, 1890-1967

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    Master's thesis (33.89Mb)
    Date
    2023-11
    Author
    Musamba, William
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    Abstract
    This study analysed Busoga’s unique political activism as premised on the foundation of its distinct pre-colonial political structure between 1890 and 1967. Using archival sources and oral interviews, the study explored the socio-cultural and political conditions of Busoga region by 1890, the early colonial historical trajectories of ethnic conflicts, the role of the Young Basoga and Abataka Association in intra-ethnic contestations, the late colonial historical trajectories of ethnic conflicts, and the legacy of Uganda's independence on the politics of Obwa’Kyabazinga as an institution. Through the theoretical triangulation of Primordialism, constructivism and instrumentalism, the study revealed the formation of notions of Busoga ethnic identity before colonial rule. However, the imposition of colonial institutions at the close of the nineteenth century hardened those ethnic notions and generated contestations over traditional authority, as well as tensions between nationalism and monarchism. The findings therefore highlighted the dynamics of ethnic identity and conflict in Busoga from the precolonial to the early post-colonial periods. For instance, in spite of the evolving conceptions of Busoga identity, pre-colonial ‘ethnic cords’ were stifled by internal strife and the geo-political influence of the ‘big powers’ of Buganda and Bunyoro. Busoga’s ethnic infrastructures only emerged as a consequence of colonial rule in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. However, the differing conceptions of kingdom politics complicated the trends of Busoga’s ethnic cohesion and development. For instance, the colonial view of the Kyabazinga as a serving officer; liable to dismissal by the state sharply contrasted the indigenous perception of the Kyabazingaship as an equivalent of Kingship within the perspective of the Buganda model. Eventual efforts by certain indigenous groups to collude with the Uganda People’s Congress post-colonial government and fully monarchise the Kyabazingaship to the status of kingship only occasioned the destruction rather than the preservation of the institution.
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    http://hdl.handle.net/10570/12538
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