Spelling suggestions: "subject:"longo (democratic republic) -- distory"" "subject:"longo (democratic republic) -- 1ristory""
1 |
Failure rather than success : conflict management and resolution in the Democratic Republic of Congo, 1996-1999Munyae, Isaac Muinde January 2001 (has links)
History has proven time and time again that conflict is an inevitable aspect of any given society. The seemingly long-standing nature of conflicts in Africa has been changing over time and these conflicts have been either inter-state or intra-state. However, sometimes intrastate wars have escalated into regional conflicts. These scenarios can be seen in the Great Lakes region of Africa where you have the civil war of 1996-7 and the rebellion, which began in 1998 in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). In the DRC there have been at least four stages of conflict. The first is against the Belgians and secondly, the civil strife of the early 1960s. Third, is the civil strife against Mobutu and fourthly, currently against Kabila. The expanding nature of conflict is characterised by power struggles, politicisation of ethnicity, and the impact of external forces. It is noted that the expanding nature of conflict calls for a change in the methods of conflict management and resolution. Initially conflicts were resolved through military intervention. but with the complexity of African wars it has become apparent that peaceful methods are more prudent. With reference to Africa it can be assumed that conflicts need to be increasingly resolved through political means, such as the use of the diplomatic process. The conflict in Chad between 1968 and 1984 is a good example in which military intervention was used but failed, giving way to mediation and negotiation through the use of diplomacy. Both the DRC and Chadian conflicts are similar because they witnessed the influence of external forces (neighbouring countries and non-African states such as France and the US) and African states attempting to find solutions to their own problems. The conflict in the DRC provides a unique example of the changing nature of intra-state conflict in Africa. Thus, the study aims to trace the characteristics of conflict in the DRC and attempts made at conflict management and resolution. The study uses the period bet ween 1996 and 1999 because it highlights this change in the nature and character of conflict.
|
2 |
Prophecy and power in Afro-Christian churches: a comparative analysis of the Nazareth Baptist church and the Eglise KimbanguisteTishken, Joel Edward 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
|
3 |
The Semah Sedaqah of Jeremiah 33:15 and its significance for the Congolese leadership.Mavinga, Joseph Nzita. January 2009 (has links)
This dissertation consists of a contextual reading of the texts of Jeremiah on semah (23:5-6; 33:14-16), together with the related texts in Isaiah (4:2; 11:1-2) and Zechariah (3:8; 6:12). The context I am reading from is the present political situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) and the leadership crisis since independence. I first approach the Masoretic Text (MT) in a synchronic way and I do not focus on a rigorous study of the texts in discussing their form, source and redaction criticism. To analyse the texts on "branch" in Jeremiah, Isaiah and Zechariah, I pay particular attention to the literary context of texts. My synchronic approach seems to de-contextualise the texts under study from their socio-historical context. However, in chapters Three and Five I place these texts in the broad historical context of the Davidic kings from about the time of Jeremiah until Judah‟s return from Exile. The analysis of the current Congolese leadership situation is confined particularly to the governance of President Mobutu Sésé Seko. In particular, the focus is on the second period of his presidency, from 1975 to his dismissal on May 17, 1997. The social situation, during this period, had worsened immeasurably in the country. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
|
4 |
Military interventions in African conflicts : the Southern African Development Community coalition of the Willing's military intervention in the Democratic Republic of Congo, 1998-2002.Maeresera, Sadiki. January 2012 (has links)
This study focuses on the premise that national interests of governments are the primary
motivating factors that inform decisions on military interventions. Military strategy remains a
principal tool in the attainment, pursuance and safeguarding of these interests. Military
intervention is the last resort to a series of options that begin with and continue to inform the
dynamic: diplomacy, policing, reliance on alliance action and finally, deterrent or pro-active
military action. Military interventions in the 20th century have been undertaken at the
multilateral, regional and sub-regional levels in given conflicts by a range of actors. Scholarly
questions have been asked about the rationale behind the respective governments’ decisions
to undertake these interventions. In the case of this study, which focuses on the SADC
coalition of willing nations’ military intervention in the Congo conflict, questions have
centred on the following: What was the rationale and motive that led governments of the
three countries to undertake the decisions for military intervention in the Congo? Was the
intervention an altruistic act by the intervening governments seeking to stop aggression of an
ally or was it driven by the personal quests by leaders of these intervening countries to secure
their share of the DRC mineral wealth? Or, was it merely a case of the three governments
intervening as a coalition in pursuit of their varied interests? What was the strategy that this
coalition adopted in pursuit of the member countries interests? It is this attempt to explain
and determine the rationale and principal factors that informed the three countries’ decision
to intervene in the conflict and the military strategy adopted to safeguard these interests that
serve as the focal basis for this study.
In trying to answer its key questions, this study uses historical and qualitative approaches in
collecting and analysing data not only from both primary and secondary sources but also
interviews with participants (some off the record as still serving). Thus, the findings of the
research would be analysed critically within the framework of the core objectives of the
study, which seek not only to identify and establish how the interests of the governments that
intervened in the DRC conflict were the primary motivating factor that informed their
decisions on military interventions, but also to ascertain the extent to which the SADC
coalition’s military strategy became a principal tool in the attainment and safeguarding of
these varying interests as well as how that strategy was utilised as a mechanism for the
translation and development of these varying interests into common ones among the
intervening countries. Lastly, the study seeks to offer policy suggestions on the execution of
future military interventions in African conflicts, particularly at the SADC sub-regional level.
Whilst literature on military interventions seems to be informed by realpolitik, with the
notions by Barry Buzan (and others) that strong states take decisions to intervene when their
geostrategic and economic interests are served, states can also militarily intervene for
humanitarian purposes. Using the realist paradigm as a theoretical tool of analysis, the study
noted that military intervention can best be understood in terms of the power and interests of
particular nation states acting individually or collectively as a coalition using the brand of a
sub-regional, regional or even international organisation with or without the mandate of the
United Nations Security Council (UNSC). An analysis is made on the scholarly legal debates
surrounding the decision to intervene by the SADC coalition.
The study generally established that the claimed interests that motivated the decisions by the
respective governments were generally based on the political, economic and military/security
dimensions. A critical evaluation of these respective interests of the interveners show that
their interests shifted in regards to the levels of importance (that is primary and secondary
level) at the initial stage of the intervention and during the intervention period. The
coalition’s military strategy became a tool for attaining, securing and safeguarding of these
respective interests. As part of the strategy, the SADC coalition’s Mutual Defence Pact acted
as a political and legal guide in the promotion of complimentary and common interests of the
interveners. Despite formulating such a military strategy, the unexpected longevity of the intervention
impacted on the intervening countries’ logistical capacity to sustain the war effort. An
initiative by the DRC government to enter into bilateral business ventures with the respective
SADC countries and its awarding of mining concessions to the same was meant to be part,
arguably, of sustaining the military intervention. However, this war time economic initiative
has raised questions among scholars and policy practitioners on whether or not the decision
for intervention by a coalition of these countries was basically underpinned by the quest to
attain and safeguard national interests or it was aimed at promoting personal elite interests.
Having taken note that the major findings of the study revolve around contentious primary
issues relating to foreign policy decision making in the context of military intervention, a
number of recommendations are made. These include:
· Firstly, the undertaking of cost benefit analyses in regard to political, legal and
economic matters prior to a nation’s decision for military intervention;
· Secondly, the need for an appropriate and effective sub-regional mechanism guided
by a sub-regional legal guide or tool for military intervention that would be utilised
within the relevant AU and UN political and military framework;
Finally a paradigm shift is needed in the conceptualization of what constitutes national
interest. This includes a new theoretical thinking based on unilateral and multilateral military
intervention in the present global order which should be based on the global or collective
interest where maintenance of international peace, stability and security (more importantly
human security) are of primary importance. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2012.
|
5 |
De la force publique à l'armée nationale congolaise: histoire d'une mutinerie, juillet 1960Vanderstraeten, Louis-François January 1982 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
|
6 |
An evaluation of the modern church in light of the early church : the case of Seventh Day Adventist Church in the Democratic Republic of CongoKakule, Mithimbo Paul 11 1900 (has links)
One of the concerns of the modern Christian church and dissident groups is to
ensure that the Church's fundamental doctrines, leadership, women's ministries
and religious practices conform with the early apostolic church teachings.
In this study the writer offers a comprehensive and detailed evaluation of the
modern church in the light of the early church. The case of the modern Seventhday
Adventist (SDA) Church in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and
worldwide is examined and compared, basing its survey on numerous published
and unpublished documents from a combined use of primary, secondary
materials and individual statements.
Setting the early history of the SDA Church within the religious context of
nineteenth-century America, the writer describes how SDA doctrines, leadership,
women's ministries and religious practices link with those beliefs and practices in
the early apostolic church, showing whether the SDA Church has departed from
the early apostolic church’s Biblical, timeless principles or not.
Several pertinent issues however have stirred up as much controversy in recent
years within the Adventist dissident groups as that of the women’s ministries in
the church, the righteousness by faith doctrine, the monarchical leadership, and
various religious practices. Nevertheless, in the light of the early apostolic
teaching, some enlightenment has been achieved, and several critical
accusations from dissident groups were illuminated and confirmed.The accusation regarding the deterioration of Biblical doctrines appears not to
have been confirmed by the Biblical evaluation and the lifestyle of the SDA
believers. Rather, concerning this issue, it is confirmed that in the DRC and
worldwide, the SDA Church has not departed from the fundamental doctrines of
the early Apostolic church. / Thesis (D. TH. (Church History))
|
7 |
Marketing Cold War tourism in the Belgian Congo : a study in colonial propaganda 1945-1960Wigley, Andrew Paul 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study focuses on the nascent colonial tourist sector of the Belgian Congo from 1945 until
independence in 1960. Empire in Africa was the last remaining vestige of might for the depleted
European imperial powers following the Second World War. That might, however, was largely
illusory, especially for Belgium, which had been both defeated and occupied by Germany. Post-war
Belgium placed much value on its colonial role in the Belgian Congo, promoting and marketing its
imperial mission to domestic and international audiences alike. Such efforts allowed Belgium to
justify a system that was under fire from the new superpowers of the United States of America (USA)
and the Soviet Union. This thesis makes the case that the Belgian authorities recognised the
opportunity to harness the ‘new’ economic activity of tourism to help deliver pro-colonial
propaganda, particularly to the USA which had a growing affluent class and where successive
administrations were keen to encourage overseas travel. In building a tourism sector post the Second
World War, efforts in diversifying the economy were secondary to the objective of using the
marketing of tourism to actively position and promote Belgium’s long-term involvement in the
Congo.
|
8 |
An evaluation of the modern church in light of the early church : the case of Seventh Day Adventist Church in the Democratic Republic of CongoKakule, Mithimbo Paul 11 1900 (has links)
One of the concerns of the modern Christian church and dissident groups is to
ensure that the Church's fundamental doctrines, leadership, women's ministries
and religious practices conform with the early apostolic church teachings.
In this study the writer offers a comprehensive and detailed evaluation of the
modern church in the light of the early church. The case of the modern Seventhday
Adventist (SDA) Church in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and
worldwide is examined and compared, basing its survey on numerous published
and unpublished documents from a combined use of primary, secondary
materials and individual statements.
Setting the early history of the SDA Church within the religious context of
nineteenth-century America, the writer describes how SDA doctrines, leadership,
women's ministries and religious practices link with those beliefs and practices in
the early apostolic church, showing whether the SDA Church has departed from
the early apostolic church’s Biblical, timeless principles or not.
Several pertinent issues however have stirred up as much controversy in recent
years within the Adventist dissident groups as that of the women’s ministries in
the church, the righteousness by faith doctrine, the monarchical leadership, and
various religious practices. Nevertheless, in the light of the early apostolic
teaching, some enlightenment has been achieved, and several critical
accusations from dissident groups were illuminated and confirmed.The accusation regarding the deterioration of Biblical doctrines appears not to
have been confirmed by the Biblical evaluation and the lifestyle of the SDA
believers. Rather, concerning this issue, it is confirmed that in the DRC and
worldwide, the SDA Church has not departed from the fundamental doctrines of
the early Apostolic church. / Thesis (D. TH. (Church History))
|
9 |
A critical analysis of the role of coltan in the Eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s second war (1998-2003)Moleko, Teboho Banele January 2015 (has links)
The role of natural resources in African conflicts has been subject to extensive scholarly analysis. However, much of this analysis has taken a narrow economic reductionist bias. As such, it is imperative that the dominant assumptions and accepted concepts and theories about the role of natural resources in African conflicts be re-examined. The aim of this thesis is to offer a revaluation of the role of coltan during the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) Second War (1998-2003) through a critical engagement with the resource wars literature. The purpose is to offer a re-reading of the role of coltan in the DRC Second War and the broader regional and global economic context in which this conflict took place. It rejects the commonly cited assumption that the presence of coltan in the DRC means it is an initiator of conflict. Rather, this thesis argues that the central role of coltan in the DRC Second War was as an aggravator of conflict in that its exploitation was used by different parties to fund their military and political ambitions. This thesis also argues that the DRC’s weak state structures and pivotal role within the Great Lakes region, as well as the international trade of coltan and the nature of the DRC coltan mining industry are all key factors in understanding coltan exploitation in the country’s Eastern Region during the Second War.
|
10 |
Postcolonial biblical interpretation in the context of the Democratic Republic of the Congo : selected texts from Joshua 1-12Bwalya, Laishi 11 1900 (has links)
The present research has been aimed at investigating how imperialism and colonialism are located both in the biblical text (cf. Joshua 1-12) and in present day interpretive postcolonial contexts such as that of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
An investigation was made of the unequal power dynamics at play between the Israelites who are depicted as mercilessly conquering the indigenous peoples of Canaan in the name of the deity, and the Canaanites. How were/ are such power dynamics played out in the Katangese, Democratic Republic of the Congo’s context in the relations between the then colonizers, that is, the Belgians as well as the neo-colonial African rulers and the Congolese peoples? It is argued that the Belgians assumed the role akin to that of the Israelite invaders as they mercilessly invaded the “promised land”, that is, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, ending with the brutal extermination of African peoples justified on biblical precedents.
A conclusion is made that within the context of postcolonial biblical interpretation, the conquest narrative of Joshua 1-12 is one of the most traumatic stories in which violence is committed by one nation on another in the name of the deity. Postcolonial biblical criticism was found to be an appropriate approach in assisting the researcher to navigate through violent biblical texts with a view to coming up with a transformative reading of the texts in the (Katangese) context of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Biblical Studies)
|
Page generated in 0.0722 seconds