African Study Monographs
Online ISSN : 2435-807X
Print ISSN : 0285-1601
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Displaying 1-2 of 2 articles from this issue
Article
  • Takele Merid
    Article type: Article
    2025Volume 45 Pages 1-23
    Published: 2025
    Released on J-STAGE: February 13, 2025
    JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

    This paper is concerned with indigenous knowledge of forest management among the Gedeo people of southern Ethiopia and factors that enable them to manage their tree species. Specifically, it deals with the congeniality between celebrating festivities of an individual’s rite of passage and planting varieties of tree species within the framework of their livelihood strategies. Then, the paper deals with the challenges they often encounter in maintaining these cultural practices. Relevant qualitative data were obtained from both primary and secondary sources. Key Informant interview and In-depth Interview, respectively, with community elders and farming household heads and Focus Group Discussions were conducted at three kebeles (local level administration) of Wonago Woreda (district). The data were analyzed through considering the different data sources to present the study findings. The study found that Gedeo people have effectively managed their forest resources due to the supervision of indigenous Gadaa institutions, their effective land use and management, and their worldview and belief system towards natural resources. Above all, in Gedeo, there is often congeniality between planting trees and individuals’ rites of passage. This association enabled them to continuously manage their trees and forests and make their living on them in the form of what is known as agroforestry.

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  • Patrick Agbedejobi
    Article type: Article
    2025Volume 45 Pages 24-48
    Published: 2025
    Released on J-STAGE: July 10, 2025
    JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

    This paper offers a new way of conceptualising the style and perceivable populist communicative performances from a non-Western perspective. It uses the dialectical-relational version of critical discourse analysis to examine political candidates’ rhetorical tropes and performative acts to register the aspect of stance-taking, blame attribution, and populist communicative style in Nigeria. The findings suggest that specific styles and rhetoric are dependent on social and self-style identities that fit into unique socio-cultural spaces. The anti-establishment populist rhetoric of the antagonistic association between the establishment politicians and a fictive multitude, “the people”, demonstrates the construction of “otherness” exploited to gain political support. The paper concludes that the exploitation of referent object “the people” as the mobilising currency, which is a universal populism ideal, did not result in electoral success in Nigeria. Howbeit, certain socio-political, historical or cultural, and post-colonial constructs affects populist outcomes especially in heterogeneous African societies.

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