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Class and Power in Sudan
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Table of Contents

List of Tables and Figures Preface Introduction 1. The Development of the Economy up to 1930 I. Before 1898 II. Determing the direction of economic development after 1898 III. The inception of the cotton schemes IV. Other economic developments 2. Economic Developments 1930-56 I. The re-investment of accumulated capital II. The government sector: administration and services III. The government sector: productive investment IV. The private sector: investment in pump schemes V. The private sector: investment in mechanised farming in the rainlands VI. The private sector: investment in real estate, commerce and petty manufacturing VII. The economic position in 1956 3. Social Forces under Condominium I. Introduction II. Reinvestment and the economic elite (a) Religious leaders (b) Tribal leaders (c) Merchants (traders) (d) Higher civil servants and professionals (e) Composition of policy-making bodies: representation of the economic elite in the Legislative Assemly and the first Parliament III. Social structure: the size and character of socio-economic groupings (a) Peasants (b) Nomads (c) Tenant farmers (d) Rural farmers (e) Urban workers (f) Salariat (g) Merchants (h) Class structure Appendix: The Sufi religious orders (Turuq) 4. Social Movements, Regional Movements and Administrative Organisation, 1898-1956 I. Social movements and organisations (a) The labour movement (b) The tenants' movement (c) The student movement (d) The women's movement (e) The military II. Regional movements and organisations (a) The basis of inequality (b) Regional movements in northern Sudan (c) The regional movement in southern Sudan III. The administrative system 5. Sudanese Nationalism and the Attainment of Independence I. Introduction II. Primary resisting III. The 1924 Uprising IV. The creation of quasi-political groupings around establishment figures, 1920s and 1930s V. The Literary Study Groups, late 1920s and 1930s VI. The re-emergence of a nationalist movement: the Graduates' Congress and the development of political parties, 1938-46 VII. The rise of a radical nationalist movement, 1945-56 VIII. The transition to independence 6. The Dynamics of Post-Independence Politics, 1956-69 I. Perspective II. 1956-8: The first parliamentary period (a) The emergence of the National Unionist Party as a secular nationalist movement (b) Changing electoral rules and the 1958 elections (c) The South III. 1958-64: the 'Abbud regime (a) The Assumption of power by the military (b) Civilian representation (c) The South IV. 1964-9: the second parliamentary period (a) The rise and fall of the transitional government and subsequent developments V. The economy 7. Politics and Economy under the Nimairi Regime, 1969-85 I. The overall pattern II. The free officers' movement and the seizure of power (a) Origins of the free officers; movement: the 1950s (b) Development of a new officers' movements in the 1960s and the 1969 coup III. Programmes for social and economic change, 1969-71 IV. The failure to maintain the progressive alliance, 1969-71 V. The political institutions of the regime, post-1971 VI. Political dynamics affecting the roles of the political institutions VII. Popular participation: the Sudan Socialist Union VIII. The pursuit of national unity: regional autonomy in the southern Sudan IX. Economic policy and achievement X. The dynamics of the Nirmairi regime's disintegration Epilogue Notes Appendix Glossary of Arabic Terms Index

About the Author

Tim Niblock is a Lecturer in Politics at the University of Exeter.

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