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  • Development and the African Diaspora: place and the politics of home
  • Anna Lindley
Claire Mercer, Ben Page and Martin Evans, Development and the African Diaspora: place and the politics of home. London and New York NY: Zed Books. (pb £18.99 – ISBN 978 1 84277 901 9). 2008, 264 pp.

Development and the African Diaspora focuses on African home associations, exploring what they are, what they do and how they do it. The authors suggest that home associations are neither necessarily instruments of reactionary parochial tribalism nor automatically instruments of transnational transformative cosmopolitanism – two contrasting images common in the development research and policy literature. Rather, this approach situates home associations in relation to complex and shifting subjectivities, place-making processes, and negotiations of modernity and progress. It is alive to nuance, variation and contradiction, embracing complexity but not swamped by it.

The book is based on careful research with home associations linked with two Tanzanian and two Cameroonian ‘home places’. As the authors rightly point out, this kind of detailed empirical research on African migrants’ associations is long overdue, with recent policy enthusiasm for home associations as developmental actors tending to run ahead of research in African contexts. The book succeeds in moving very well between empirical detail and conceptual framing. Part I explores the significance of home associations, in general and in the specific African contexts discussed in this book; Part II traces the history and structure of the home associations in the case study areas; Part III highlights the researched [End Page 321] home associations’ distinct areas of activity, from welfare to burials to education and infrastructure; and Part IV concludes by considering how international development policy makers might engage with home associations, and whether they should.

Four research findings are particularly important to underline, as they represent major advances in our understanding of African diasporas and development. The first point relates to the nature of home associations, which generally have been understood in African studies as ethno-territorial networks of ‘chapters’ connecting indigenes at home and in domestic destinations across the nation state, and quite often seen as reactionary, tribalist and elite-promoting in nature. Drawing on Lonsdale’s seminal work on ethnicity, Mercer and colleagues distinguish between political belonging (exploiting affinity for elite political ends) and moral conviviality (local ideas about how groups should live together), and point to how the home associations they have studied often integrate elements of both. Home associations’ declared developmental and cultural purposes should not eclipse the real political work that they do – shaping relationships of legitimacy and accountability, and often helping local political elites survive through uncertain times. At the same time, the authors emphasize the sincere work done in the name of progress through home associations: by definition narrow in their interests, home associations can nevertheless be part of a progressive politics of place. However, the authors are circumspect about the more recent celebration of heroic diaspora associations as channelling money from the global North to investment in public goods at the grassroots in the poorest parts of the world. Far from starry-eyed, Mercer and colleagues point to the actually quite variable nature of diaspora contributions, and the unevenness of their impact in terms of who benefits.

This links to the second major contribution of the book, which is to highlight the frequently poorly articulated, transitory, intermittent, opportunistic nature of diaspora groups’ contribution to home development. Rather than centralized hierarchical structures radiating out from the home area, home associations emerge as often multiple, overlapping, decentred, constantly shifting networks with uneven geographies of connection, suggesting that we should rethink home associations ‘as practices rather than structures’ (p. 228).

The third key finding is the significance of the role of the ‘domestic diaspora’ in home associations. Internal migration has been rather overlooked in recent migration–development research and policy debates, but not so in this study. Indeed, the authors suggest that the domestic diasporas are in fact more influential in home associations, in financial and managerial terms, than the international diasporas studied in the UK (although it would be interesting to see the role of migrants in other African countries, an acknowledged gap). The authors waste no time...

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