The dissertation uses the lens of electricity provision to examine processes of state formation in Somaliland, an unrecognized, self-declared independent state in the northwest of the former Somali Republic. The dissertation focuses on Hargeisa, the capital city at the heart of Somaliland's state-building project. After the collapse of the Somali state in 1991, private companies arose from the ruins of Hargeisa and turned the lights back on, navigating a fragmented post-war landscape by mobilizing local connections and transnational ties. However, being dependent on the political settlement that engendered the peace necessary for business, emerging private power providers were tied into a state-building project. The dissertation analyses th...
This article investigates the negotiation of statehood in Somaliland, a non-recognized de facto stat...
Increasing attention paid to state-building and reconstruction of post-conflict states has highlight...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the grim necessity of state-building and the outwardly visi...
The stabilization of Somaliland in 1992-1993 illustrates a unique, indigenous produced,\ud process o...
Blackouts in African cities have received little attention from historians. Using archival and other...
Electricity remains one of the fundamental factors that facilitates the economic growth and developm...
The collapse of Somalia’s central government in 1991 has fissured the state into three distinct soci...
International norms of what it means to be a state dictate domestic policy within developing and unr...
This thesis looks at the visual manifestations of electricity and their relation to political power ...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyse strategies within the political elite in Somaliland for pro...
Abstract This study addresses two macro issues, which concern politics and state affairs in post-c...
While the history of electrification has been studied for nearly forty years, beginning with Thomas ...
Can informal 'traditional' institutions help to build more legitimate, accountable and efficient sta...
Abstract: Somaliland has recently developed an unexpected democracy after seceding from chaos-ridden...
In this study I analyze how a development narrative influences policy and strategies in the case of ...
This article investigates the negotiation of statehood in Somaliland, a non-recognized de facto stat...
Increasing attention paid to state-building and reconstruction of post-conflict states has highlight...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the grim necessity of state-building and the outwardly visi...
The stabilization of Somaliland in 1992-1993 illustrates a unique, indigenous produced,\ud process o...
Blackouts in African cities have received little attention from historians. Using archival and other...
Electricity remains one of the fundamental factors that facilitates the economic growth and developm...
The collapse of Somalia’s central government in 1991 has fissured the state into three distinct soci...
International norms of what it means to be a state dictate domestic policy within developing and unr...
This thesis looks at the visual manifestations of electricity and their relation to political power ...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyse strategies within the political elite in Somaliland for pro...
Abstract This study addresses two macro issues, which concern politics and state affairs in post-c...
While the history of electrification has been studied for nearly forty years, beginning with Thomas ...
Can informal 'traditional' institutions help to build more legitimate, accountable and efficient sta...
Abstract: Somaliland has recently developed an unexpected democracy after seceding from chaos-ridden...
In this study I analyze how a development narrative influences policy and strategies in the case of ...
This article investigates the negotiation of statehood in Somaliland, a non-recognized de facto stat...
Increasing attention paid to state-building and reconstruction of post-conflict states has highlight...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the grim necessity of state-building and the outwardly visi...