Book

Libyan politics: tribe and revolution : an account of the Zuwaya and their government

University of California PressBerkeley • Published In 1988 • Pages: xii, 297

By: Davis, J. (John).

Abstract
This study examines the Zuwaya tribe of Western Cyrenaica (in the Districts of Ajbabiya and Kufra) since after the Popular Revolution of 1973-1974. It offers some insight, albeit in a meandering and anecdotal manner, of Bedouin adaptation to state politics. In local elections voting patterns follow lineage and tribal affiliations (political parties are illegal.) Shaikhs do political manuervering to get lineage members to head key committees. Politics seems to follow the model of the segmentary lineage system. Young cadres do not have the knowledge, authority, or political saavy of the traditional shaikhs and the state is dependent on the latter to implement its programs. For example, the decree for universal education was taken up by one shaikh who through personal connections and lobbying eventually got the community to go along. This underscores the continuing importance of women in Bedouin society in forming economic and political connections. The author discovers that in one village the core group consists of consanguinely-related women. Much of the book looks at Qaddafi's rise to power, his socialist state ideology, and the latter's correspondance to a traditional tribal ethos.
Subjects
Settlement patterns
Lineages
Tribe and nation
Districts
Elections
Political movements
culture
Libyan Bedouin
HRAF PubDate
1999
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Northern Africa
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1998
Field Date
1975-1979
Coverage Date
1975-1979
Coverage Place
Western Cyrenaica, Libya
Notes
John Davis
Includes bibliographical references (p.287-291) and index
LCCN
87019241
LCSH
Bedouins