Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine

In 1991, the highly centralized state of Ethiopia was transformed into a federal state with large transfers of administrative powers to the regional states. At the same time, Eritrea gained de facto its independence and Ethiopia became landlocked. Ethiopia was under the rule of the provisional gover...

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Main Author: Bezunech Tamru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2005-01-01
Series:Espace populations sociétés
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eps/2710
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spelling doaj-90db31e5125e4eb38db584e735a56c172020-11-24T21:17:44ZengUniversité des Sciences et Technologies de LilleEspace populations sociétés0755-78092104-37522005-01-0120051718210.4000/eps.2710Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaineBezunech TamruIn 1991, the highly centralized state of Ethiopia was transformed into a federal state with large transfers of administrative powers to the regional states. At the same time, Eritrea gained de facto its independence and Ethiopia became landlocked. Ethiopia was under the rule of the provisional government that had created 14 regional states. The number of these states was later reduced to 9 by the constitution of 1995. The constitution has also created two metropolis that are directly accountable to the federal level. These metropolis are Addis-Ababa, the capital city, and Dere-Dawa the second largest city of the country. The two cities are hence federal urban enclosures inside the regional states. By considering the case of these two urban enclosures, three level of analysis are proposed in the following paper. First, the evolution of territorial and political aims are examined by analysing their strives to open up Ethiopia especially by means of cities’ development. The emergence of the regional states and their identities’ recognition in the newly established federation are also studied so as to assess the real impact of the current decentralization process. At last, the new stakes linked to the federal cities in the context of the Ethiopian cities network are analysed. The evolution of this network seems to be a new way of tackling the problem of being a landlocked state for contemporary Ethiopia.http://journals.openedition.org/eps/2710Addis-AbabadecentralizationDere-DawaEthiopialandlocked stateurban enclosures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bezunech Tamru
spellingShingle Bezunech Tamru
Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
Espace populations sociétés
Addis-Ababa
decentralization
Dere-Dawa
Ethiopia
landlocked state
urban enclosures
author_facet Bezunech Tamru
author_sort Bezunech Tamru
title Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
title_short Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
title_full Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
title_fullStr Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
title_full_unstemmed Enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’Éthiopie contemporaine
title_sort enclaves urbaines et stratégies territoriales dans l’éthiopie contemporaine
publisher Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille
series Espace populations sociétés
issn 0755-7809
2104-3752
publishDate 2005-01-01
description In 1991, the highly centralized state of Ethiopia was transformed into a federal state with large transfers of administrative powers to the regional states. At the same time, Eritrea gained de facto its independence and Ethiopia became landlocked. Ethiopia was under the rule of the provisional government that had created 14 regional states. The number of these states was later reduced to 9 by the constitution of 1995. The constitution has also created two metropolis that are directly accountable to the federal level. These metropolis are Addis-Ababa, the capital city, and Dere-Dawa the second largest city of the country. The two cities are hence federal urban enclosures inside the regional states. By considering the case of these two urban enclosures, three level of analysis are proposed in the following paper. First, the evolution of territorial and political aims are examined by analysing their strives to open up Ethiopia especially by means of cities’ development. The emergence of the regional states and their identities’ recognition in the newly established federation are also studied so as to assess the real impact of the current decentralization process. At last, the new stakes linked to the federal cities in the context of the Ethiopian cities network are analysed. The evolution of this network seems to be a new way of tackling the problem of being a landlocked state for contemporary Ethiopia.
topic Addis-Ababa
decentralization
Dere-Dawa
Ethiopia
landlocked state
urban enclosures
url http://journals.openedition.org/eps/2710
work_keys_str_mv AT bezunechtamru enclavesurbainesetstrategiesterritorialesdanslethiopiecontemporaine
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