Jean G. Tompihé
Field:
Comparative Politics and Methods (Comparative Ethnicity)
Dissertation Title:
Ethnicity and Institution-Building in Africa
Committee:
Thomas Schwartz (Chair),
Kathleen Bawn, and
Deepak Lal (Economics)
Date of Completion:
June 2007
Contact Information:
Jean G. Tompihé
UCLA Political Science Department
4289 Bunche Hall
Los Angeles, California 90095-1472
Phone: 310-825-4331
Fax: 310-825-0778
Curriculum Vitae:
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Dissertation Summary:
My dissertation, Ethnicity and Institution-Building in Africa, observes that the state’s authority
is undergoing a historic transformation in many parts of Africa.
Some states are struggling to overcome internal conflicts based on ethnic
divisions. But Africa’s pre-colonial past reflected relatively harmonious
coexistence between most tribes. What has caused the historic condition
of comity to break down? Competing explanations for the political importance of
ethnicity on the continent have ranged from deep cultural history to
instrumentalism linked to the structural components of ethnic networks. My
dissertation examines instead how the difference in degrees of
institutionalization of postcolonial bureaucratic rule affects choice of identity and the
extent to which the intensity of ethnic feelings is shaped. I argue that
African states fraught with political authority based on selective patronage
are more likely to generate ethnic conflict than those which had more
institutionalized, bureaucratic rules. I test my argument, first,
by process tracing the overlooked postcolonial bureaucratic rule in which
nation-building was often superimposed on selective patronage. I then use a
tripartite research methodology, in which statistical, formal, and narrative
accounts are mutually supportive to investigate the
interplay among preferences, strategies, institutions, and the political
outcomes of ethnicity.
Research Interests:
As ethnicity is
increasingly influencing the developmental paths of many societies,
domestically as well as within inter-nation relations, I have extended my
research agenda and teaching interests to Ethnicity in an International
Context, broadly embracing statehood, nationalism, and religious fanaticism
embedding terrorism, with special emphasis on Africa, Eastern Europe, and the Middle
East. My research agenda emphasizes the rule of law, more
precisely the bureaucracy by exploring conditions
under which the discretionary power of bureaucratic institutions could shape
identity choice or mitigate its importance for political decision-making.
Teaching Interests:
Comparative Ethnicity and Nationalism, Ethnic Conflicts, Contemporary African Politics, Institutional Dynamics and
Behavior, Political Economy of Development, New Democracies Formal Theory, Quantitative Methods.