2004
DOI: 10.3366/afr.2004.74.4.489
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Visible and Invisible Differences: The Somali Paradox

Abstract: In exploring the difficulties experienced by the traditionally politically uncentralised Somalis in establishing a stable and effective state, based on their ethnicity, this article compares ethnicity, nationalism and lineage identity. In this case, ethnicity and nationalism are local products, influenced but not created by the colonial experience. They have had to contend with the intractable force of segmentary lineage identity, which has proved extremely difficult to adapt and accommodate to the requirement… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Considering that the first Somalis to seek asylum in Norway arrived in the late 1980s, combined with the fact that the authorities did not discriminate based on clan (Assal, 2006), the Norway-Somali population is highly heterogeneous in terms of both age, duration of residency, clan composition, war, migration, and resettlement experiences, as well as levels of education and integration. To account for this complexity, the aim was to recruit a diverse set of interviewees, particularly in terms of gender and affinity to the main clans of Dir, Isaq, Hawiye, Darod, Digil, and Rahanweyn, as this defines Somali notions of identity and collaboration (Lewis, 2002(Lewis, , 2004.…”
Section: Methods and Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Considering that the first Somalis to seek asylum in Norway arrived in the late 1980s, combined with the fact that the authorities did not discriminate based on clan (Assal, 2006), the Norway-Somali population is highly heterogeneous in terms of both age, duration of residency, clan composition, war, migration, and resettlement experiences, as well as levels of education and integration. To account for this complexity, the aim was to recruit a diverse set of interviewees, particularly in terms of gender and affinity to the main clans of Dir, Isaq, Hawiye, Darod, Digil, and Rahanweyn, as this defines Somali notions of identity and collaboration (Lewis, 2002(Lewis, , 2004.…”
Section: Methods and Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas ethnic Norwegians rely heavily on institutions beyond the family for help and security, Somalis, who have a limited tradition of trusting in state institutions (Lewis, 2004(Lewis, , 2002, often rely upon the traditional system of patrilineal clanship for structuring social networks and for maintaining a sense of ontological security and identity in diaspora (McGown, 1999;Farah, 2000;Hopkins, 2006;Engebrigtsen, 2007). Against this backdrop, health care trust/mistrust is not simply the direct outcome of individuals' health care encounters but is also generated or counter-worked in immigrants' interaction and exchange with each other.…”
Section: Trust and Immigrant Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Don't say the man was closer in blood relation to me, but say that he was good to mepeople will not forget that. 2 Loyalty to 'clan' (qabiil) and family (reer) is often cited as characteristic of Somalis and central to their personal and social identities (Lewis, 1999(Lewis, , 2004Abbink, 2003;Hagmann, 2005). Kinship and 'clan' in the Somali Region undeniably shape local targeting and distribution of international aid (Sabates-Wheeler, Lind, and Hoddinott, 2013)and access by pastoralists and semi-pastoralists to natural resources (Watkins and Fleisher, 2002).…”
Section: Kinship Versus 'Clan'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…a unity that borders on xenophobia'. In other publications, Lewis (1961Lewis ( , 1999Lewis ( , 2004 situates political relations within the segmented lineage system. 'Clanship' itself, he argues, begets political strife and continual struggles for natural and economic resources.…”
Section: Kinship Versus 'Clan'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus the authority of southern clan elders has been eroded by their being co-opted into partisan 9. Corroborated by multiple field observations throughout Africa by the authors since 1963. political combat (Bakonyi and Stuvoy, 2005;Gundel and Dharbaxo, 2006;Lewis, 2004;LeSage, 2001;Little, 2003;Samatar, 1992;also, Interviews, 2006: 45, 78). Many believe that the clans were manipulated and bought in the creation of the TFG, compromising its legitimacy.…”
Section: Clan Governancementioning
confidence: 99%