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  • Rwanda: From Genocide to Precarious Peace by Susan Thomson
  • Aditi Malik
Susan Thomson. Rwanda: From Genocide to Precarious Peace. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2018. xv + 321 pp. Maps. Photographs. Notes. Glossary. Index. $30.00. Cloth. ISBN: 978-0-300-19739-6.

In Rwanda: From Genocide to Precarious Peace, Susan Thomson provides a critical examination of President Paul Kagame and the Rwandan Patriotic Front's (RPF) post-conflict reconstruction model. As an employee of the UNDP during Rwanda's 1994 genocide and a foremost expert on the country's politics, Thomson is particularly well-equipped to write this monograph. The wide scope of the book—from the colonial origins of the genocidal state to the possibilities of future violence—is testimony to Thomson's masterful knowledge of the country's many complexities.

Drawing on official reports, including the 1994 Gersony Report on the genocide, observations from several years of ethnographic fieldwork, and countless interviews with the elites who defend the Rwandan state as well as the ordinary citizens who feel trapped by it, Thomson provides a perspective that Kagame's supporters have largely missed. Far from being inclusive, she convincingly shows that Rwanda's rural majority has been left out of the RPF's vision of security, peace, development, and democracy.

The book is organized into four sections. Part I (Chapters 1–3) details the developments between the civil war and the genocide. Part II (Chapters 4–7) illuminates the particular ways in which the RPF sought to bring about peace in the wake of the genocide, prioritizing physical security above all else. As part of this goal, and so as to accommodate returnees from neighboring countries, the government uprooted hundreds of thousands of poor Rwandans from their homes. Officials also persuaded foreign donors to allow them to invade the DRC on "humanitarian grounds" (120) in order to prevent Laurent-Désiré Kabila from arming Rwandan Hutu rebels. Part III (Chapters 8–10) evaluates the Kagame regime's developmental priorities, including its aim to transform Rwanda into a middle-income country by 2020 as per its Vision 2020 program. Finally, Part IV (Chapters 9–10) highlights the contours of the post-genocide political system, a one-party state that so completely dominates the public and private lives of its citizens that it could only be threatened if an external actor similar in strength to the RPF insurgency were to enter the mix. [End Page E25]

At its core, this book shows that the RPF's model for security, peace, development, and democracy is internally inconsistent. The regime maintains that peace can only be achieved via security, and that peace and security are both necessary for economic development. Yet, as Thomson argues, Rwanda's "precarious peace" is a coerced and patently negative peace, marked merely by an absence of active violence (199). Even more paradoxically, Kagame's "all hands on deck" approach to development has failed to produce results for the country's rural majority, who continue to struggle with economic insecurity (146).

In explaining these letdowns, Thomson highlights that Rwanda's elite rule-makers have little understanding of the lived, ground-level realities of ordinary citizens. Previous research, including Sara Jane Cooper-Knock's work on gender quotas ("Rwanda: Liberation by Numbers?" Democracy in Africa [5 April 2016]) has raised similar concerns. In spite of the fact that Rwanda's parliament boasts the highest number of female parliamentarians worldwide, the predominantly urban, Anglophone, and Tutsi women MPs have enacted few policies that actually benefit rural women. Rwanda's corruption-free reputation, moreover, hinges on an omnipresent state that empowers local officials to use discretion in providing social benefits, especially to poor and destitute citizens (153–54). Finally, while elites champion entrepreneurship, the state simultaneously treats ordinary Rwandans as children (152).

The book demonstrates that tensions are also rife in the RPF's proposed ideas about the relationship between development and democracy. For instance, few Rwandans in civic, academic, and student leadership positions have been able to escape RPF party membership (160). Furthermore, the country's 2003 elections took place with virtually no political competition (161). And while some international donors have recognized these realities, Rwanda has continued to...

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