Academic literature on the topic 'Mauritania – Ethnic relations'

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Journal articles on the topic "Mauritania – Ethnic relations"

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Grishina, Nina. "Mauritania: the Evolution of Political Structures." Uchenie zapiski Instituta Afriki RAN, no. 3 (September 30, 2021): 56–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.31132/2412-5717-2021-56-3-56-65.

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The Islamic Republic of Mauritania as an independent State emerged as a result of the collapse of colonial French West Africa, which included Mauritania. Its independence was declared on November 28, 1960. At the turning point of historical epochs, under the influence of national liberation movements on the continent and the general democratization of world government institutions, wide opportunities opened up for political activity, both for individual parties and movements, and for a particular individual. The pressure of foreign monopolies, the archaic social structure, internal political instability and the complexity of relations with neighboring countries have become serious obstacles to the development of Mauritania. During the years of independence, Mauritania has repeatedly experienced coups d’etat, which could not but have a negative impact on the entire socio-political spectrum of this West African country. Decades of French colonial influence has been reflected in the formation of political institutions in Mauritania, such as the Constitutional Council and the judiciary. Mauritania’s domestic policy has been based on racial and ethnic lines for many years. The protracted confrontation resulted in a conflict between the black population mainly in the south of the country and the traditionally Berber Arabs living in the northern regions, whose representatives held leading state posts. Each new head of state who came to power in post-colonial Mauritania, among the main tasks of domestic development, set the task of uniting various ethnic groups. Despite the obvious difficulties in solving this issue, the main tasks of the country’s leadership in the field of domestic policy are strict compliance with the current legislation in order to restore public confidence in state institutions and psychological restructuring of the consciousness of the vast majority of the population, aimed at developing a new attitude to domestic political life. In the 1980s, the country began a movement for the right of women to participate in the socio-economic sphere. But only in the 21st century did they gain the right to hold political office, although they are still required to live under Sharia law. At the level of public consciousness, the participation of women in politics and in other spheres of public activity is not approved. Traditional slavery is a special problem of socio-political development.
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McDougall, E. A. "Setting the Story Straight: Louis Hunkanrin and Un forfait colonial." History in Africa 16 (1989): 285–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171788.

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In Paris 1931, the Ligue des Droits de l'Homme published the pamphlet, Un forfait colonial: l'esclavage en Mauritanie. Its author was a man best known in the context of radical Dahomean politics, Louis Hunkanrin, who had cause to know Mauritania better than he would have liked during ten years spent there in political exile. This exposé of slavery in Mauritania is a curious concoction -- general information damning the morals, values and work ethic of Moorish society; selected cases of injustice drawn from his personal experience; a lengthy report by a medical official despairing of Mauritania's poor food production and its relation to the slave situation; an eloquent letter to the Governor of Mauritania presenting a defense of his own actions; brutal attacks on particular French administrators; all with a large dose of French patriotism liberally sprinkled throughout. As stated in his preface, Hunkanrin's aim in exposing the crimes committed against the blacks in Mauritania was none other than “to illuminate the true face of France in this territory where the French flag flies—emblem of peace, liberty, and justice: the France of the Rights of Man, maternal France, good, generous and just,… It is well understood that I am only concerned to serve the interests of France and humanity.”
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Sass, Setty, Mariem Sidi Mohamed, Ahmed Zein, Ahmed Elberae, Abderrazzak Khadmaoui, Soad Khllayoun, L. Aicha Lrhorfi, and Rachid Bengueddour. "Relation Entre Les Facteurs Socio-Économiques Et L’anémie Au Cours De La Grossesse (Nouakchott – Mauritanie)." European Scientific Journal, ESJ 13, no. 36 (December 31, 2017): 93. http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/esj.2017.v13n36p93.

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Anemia is one of the most common public health problems in the world, especially among pregnant women. The objective of our study is to describe the socio-demographic and epidemiological profile of anemic women. We conducted a prospective study in the maternity department of the CHEIKH ZAYED Hospital Center in Nouakchott, during the period from 2015 to 2016. In addition, 400 pregnant women are interviewed, including 49.75% (n=199) with anemia, of which 34.17% were under 24 years of age, 63.31% are white Moors and 90.45% are at home. As a result, Statistical analyzes show a significant relationship, between certain socio-economic factors (Age, provenence area, ethnic origin, household size) and anemia.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Mauritania – Ethnic relations"

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Thiam, Khoudia. "La diaspora mauritanienne : entre retour et éloignement depuis les "Événements" de 1989." Thèse, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/21237.

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Books on the topic "Mauritania – Ethnic relations"

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Mauritania, the other apartheid? Uppsala, Sweden: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, 1993.

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Tribus, ethnies et pouvoir en Mauritanie. Paris: Karthala, 2010.

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Marchesin, Philippe. Tribus, ethnies et pouvoir en Mauritanie. Paris: Karthala, 1992.

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Noirs de Mauritanie: Une vie de pierre. Paris: Paari éditeur, 2014.

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Sow, Amadou Aliou. La Mauritanie, mon pays natal: Mémoires. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2003.

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Les Haratins: Le paysage politique mauritanien. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2003.

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Soudan, François. Le marabout et le colonel: La Mauritanie de Ould Daddah à Ould Taya. Paris: Jalivres, 1992.

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Les Peuls et l'état en Mauritanie: Une anthropologie des marges. Paris: Karthala, 2010.

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Sene, Sidi. Ignored Cries of Pain and Injustice from Mauritania. Trafford Publishing, 2011.

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Sene, Sidi. The Ignored Cries of Pain and Injustice from Mauritania. Trafford Publishing, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Mauritania – Ethnic relations"

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Sharief, Salah M. "The Influence of Sufism on the Sudanese Belt." In Orientālistika. Cilvēkzināšana un Āzijas aktualitātes, 80–95. LU Akadēmiskais apgāds, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/luraksti.os.819.05.

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As of the last decade of the 20th century, the Middle East and Africa have been the birthplace of extremist organizations espousing a radical ideology, which encourages violence against the dissenters and branding them apostates. Organizations like Al-Qā’ida and Dā’ish/ISIL performed numerous terrorist acts around the world, but especially in the Middle East. Other Salafi organizations like Boko Haram also gained recognition in international media disproportionate to their actual size. This discourse was behind the coinage of the term ‘Islamic Terrorism’, which casts a shadow of suspicion on any member of the Muslim community worldwide and served as an impetus for the writing of this paper as a means of shedding light on other Muslim organizations, which arguably are much larger in scope and influence. At the same time, these organizations are peaceful in nature and characterized by an incomparable level of tolerance. In my quest for sources of both narratives, I traced the history of the advent and dissemination of Islam in Africa – such a diverse geographic, cultural, ethnic and religious setting. I discovered that whereas the advent of Islam in the northern part of the region (North Africa) unfolded relatively quickly through invasion, it entered the Sudanese Belt (an area from the red sea shore of modern-day Sudan in the East to today’s Mauritania by the Atlantic Ocean in the West) more gradually via trade relations and the influence of Sufi sheikhs. They lived with the people indigenous to the area and seamlessly weaved themselves into the fabric of the societies they came to counsel. This paper argues that the areas where Sufi Islam is present have been largely shielded from extremist ideologies, and the reverse is true for North Africa, where Islam arrived in a relatively short period of invasion. The argument is presented by looking at the example of modernday Sudan, which leads me to examine the phenomenon of Sufi orders entering political life through direct involvement by establishing political parties, which propelled them into direct confrontation with representatives of a different branch of the Islamic movement in politics, namely, the Islamists. Arguably, the strongest Islamist party in the Middle East and Africa of today is the Muslim Brotherhood. I look at the diverging values of the two. Where the Muslim Brotherhood is arguably seeking absolute political power through a rigid organizational structure, the Sufi orders have been integrating into the political life of the country of residence. I argue that this example constitutes an opportunity to renegotiate the social contract between different factions of the society and lay the foundation for a different Islamic narrative. One based on pluralism, tolerance and understanding, which has the potential to gradually transform the sociopolitical environment of the entire Sudanese Belt in this direction.
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