Unlimiting the Limits of African Borders: The Case of Cameroon-Nigeria Border Towns of Abongshe and Abong
Journal Title: Asian Journal Social Sciences & Humanities - Year 2015, Vol 4, Issue 2
Abstract
The notion and function of boundary differed fundamentally in the European and African contexts. In traditional Africa, the concept of boundary was expressed in terms of neighbours with whom the particular polity shared a territory and such a boundary was conceived of in terms of a region or a narrow zone fronting the two neighbours marked off by it. Thus, the boundary was the zone where two States were joined together, not separated. In other words, African boundaries were usually rooted in ethnic and social contact. But European partition of Africa conceived boundaries as physical separation points. Africans who had become frontiersmen had no immediate knowledge that their lands and kin divided by the boundary were now “foreign”. They did not know that the new boundaries functioned differently from the traditionally familiar ones. They thought the former was only for the white men until they were checked at crossing points. Its impact on their relations with their kin and neighbours made them to create secret routes across the frontiers. But these new borders soon faded in their minds in favour of their familiar economic and socio-cultural interactions, and providing favourable breading spaces for new border stakes, namely, prostitution, smuggling and child trafficking. Often, the border regimes participated and surrendered their authority to the overwhelming influence of these phenomena. This paper, therefore, attempts a theoretical approach to the notion of boundaries, the valorisation of ethnic rather than international prescript boundaries by the inhabitants of Abongshe and Abong, and shows how their activities render this Cameroon-Nigeria frontier line a cooperating and blending zone. It, of course, brings to book the famous African-frontier- prone-conflict paradigm.
Authors and Affiliations
Mark Funteh
DETERMINANTS OF COST EFFICIENCY OF SMALLHOLDERS PEPPER IN SARAWAK, MALAYSIA
Pepper crop (Piper Nigrum L) is one of an important source of income for 67,000 rural families in the interior areas of Sarawak. This study is carried out to estimate technical, allocate, and cost efficiency among smal...
A COMMUNICATIVE ACT STUDY TO SUPPORT HEALTH COMMUNICATION RESEARCH ON TELEVISION ADVERTISEMENTS
The study in this paper seeks to examine the application of a communicative act study to investigate health messages about, for example, preventing disease and healthy living, on television advertisements. In interacti...
PERCEPTION OF THE SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS ON PERFORMANCE OF THE STUDENTS
This article tests the assumption that environmental effects play a vital role in the way of students’ performance. It also verifies the assumption that the government secondary school teachers...
DOES REMITTANCE INFLOW PROMOTE FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH ASIA?
Even though remittance income has become one of the major sources of external finance for South Asian countries, its influence on financial development of the region has not been sufficiently examined. This paper studies...
IMPACT OF GENDER DIVERSITY ON TEAM PERFORMANCE: THE MODERATING ROLE OF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE IN TELECOM SECTOR OF PAKISTAN
This paper examined the relationship between gender diversity and team performance in telecom sector of Pakistan with moderating role of organizational culture. Sample size for this study was 225. 350 questionnaires were...