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  • A Socialist Peace? Explaining the Absence of War in an African Country by Mike McGovern
  • Elizabeth Schmidt
Mike McGovern. A Socialist Peace? Explaining the Absence of War in an African Country. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017. xxi + 249 pp. Maps. Photographs. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $90.00. Cloth. ISBN: 978-0-226-45357-6. $30.00 Paper. ISBN: 978-0-226-45360-6. $30.00. E-book. ISBN: 978-0-226-45374-3.

In this significant contribution to postcolonial African political studies, Mike McGovern assumes the challenge of explaining a negative: why do people choose not to go to war, when neighbors facing similar societal fractures have engaged in extensive intracommunal violence? This question is especially fraught in the Mano River region of West Africa, where Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire were torn apart by brutal internal conflicts, while Guinea experienced ethnically based massacres but avoided widespread ethnic cleansing and civil war. In his search for answers, McGovern homes in on a pivotal six-month period in 2000 to 2001 in Guinea's forest region, where ethnic polarization, scarcity of resources, and episodic violence might have led to civil war, but did not.

McGovern's conclusion stands received wisdom on its head. While acknowledging the brutality of Sékou Touré's postindependence regime (1958–1984), McGovern rejects the common scholarly view that reduces Guinea's socialist nation-building project to an exercise in repression and challenges the oft-stated claim that democracy, rather than state socialism, is the best way to maintain peace. Instead, he argues that the promises and optimism of the postindependence socialist state, the willingness of Guineans to sacrifice for a common national good, and the sense of national identity and unity that was forged by state practices and policies endured for three decades after Sékou Touré's death. During the period of military rule (1984–2010), it was the socialist state's culture and discourse that gave Guineans the tools they needed to avoid the civil wars that plagued their neighbors—and which were far more destructive than the state violence of the Touré regime.

Nuanced, complex, and undeterred by controversy, McGovern's book highlights the views and experiences of ordinary Guineans who lived during the socialist period. Rooted in thirty-five months of research in Guinea, conducted between 1997 and 2013, it does not gloss over harsh realities, but rather, explores the paradoxes and contradictions of the state's lofty promises and flawed results. For instance, in its drive to build a nation from an ethnically diverse population, the state attempted to enforce a unitary identity by homogenizing disparate cultures. In so doing, it promoted stereotypes of "backward" and forward-looking ethnic groups, sharpening divisions between them. The privileged treatment of some over others sparked violence against those who failed to conform and resistance by those who were belittled and dominated. The ride was rough, but the outcome was a sense of national identity and belonging. [End Page 241]

The peace, however, was both fragile and imperfect, and the possibility of succumbing to violence was ever-present. After Touré's death, political, economic, and social stresses resulted in ethnic massacres and led Guinea to the brink of civil war. However, the Guinean people stepped back, hearkening to a sense of common national identity that eluded their neighbors. The socialist rhetoric and policies of the Touré years produced a "social resiliency" that prevented civil war (14). These habits of mind and practice influenced even the large majority of Guineans who were born or came of age after the socialist experiment ended. Contrary to the trope of rebellious youth who reject their elders' values, Guinean youth and young adults continued to revere many of the socialist state's perspectives and behaviors. As a result, socialist optimism endured through decades of post-socialist rule—despite the fact that subsequent rulers did little to cultivate it.

As McGovern's 2000–2001 case study demonstrates, political actors and profiteers who might have benefited from war failed to ignite a response within the local population that would have propelled the country toward civil war. Instead, while some in Guinea's forest region considered ethnic cleansing...

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