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Unemployed Intellectuals in the Sahara: The Teshumara Nationalist Movement and the Revolutions in Tuareg Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2004

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Abstract

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In the past four decades the Tuareg, a people inhabiting the central Sahara, experienced dramatic socioeconomic upheaval caused by the national independence of the countries they inhabit, two droughts in the 1970s and 1980s, and prolonged rebellion against the state in Mali and Niger in the 1990s. This article discusses these major upheavals and their results from the viewpoint of three groups of Tuareg intellectuals: the “organic intellectuals” or traditional tribal leaders and Muslim religious specialists; the “traditional intellectuals” who came into being from the 1950s onwards; and the “popular intellectuals” of the teshumara movement, which found its origins in the drought-provoked economic emigration to the Maghreb, and which actively prepared the rebellions of the 1990s. By focusing on the debates between these intellectuals on the nature of Tuareg society, its organization, and the direction its future should take, the major changes in a society often described as guarding its traditions will be exposed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis

Footnotes

Research for this article has been funded through grants offered by the Amsterdam School for Social Science Research, and the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO–SIR 12–3958, NWO–SIR 11–1840 and NWO–CNRS F 24–823). I would like to thank Greg Mann, the members of the Sahel Club, and Rosanne Rutten for their comments and suggestions. Of course, all errors are mine.