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African Affairs 2007 106(424):391-412; doi:10.1093/afraf/adm037
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© The Author [2007]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal African Society. All rights reserved

‘Liberation’ or capture: Youth in between ‘hakuma’, and ‘home’ during civil war and its aftermath in Southern Sudan

Cherry Leonardi

Cherry Leonardi (d.c.leonardi{at}durham.ac.uk) is a Research Associate of the Department of History, Durham University, where she completed a PhD in 2005 on the history of colonial chiefship in Southern Sudan

Generational tension and youth crisis have been prominent themes in recent analyses of civil conflict in Africa. Field research in Southern Sudan in 2004–2006 suggests that the analysis does not fit the Sudanese war. This article examines a structural opposition between the sphere of military/government (the ‘hakuma’) and the sphere of ‘home’. It argues that to be a ‘youth’ in Southern Sudan means to inhabit the tensions of the space between these spheres. While attempting to resist capture by either sphere, youth have used their recruitment by the military to invest in their home or family sphere. Their aspiration to ‘responsibility’ illustrates not generational rebellion, but the moral continuity in local society, also evident in discussions of marriage.


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