As to this:
The problem with African borders is not so much that they separate ethnical groups, or force separate ethnical groups to live together. Actually, ethnical groups in Africa aren't as numerous as one would imagine.
The idea of a country that fits an ethnical group is typically a European one, more specifically a German one (but since you're Germany's b*tch, it's normal that you can't see through this
)
In places in Africa, you have political divisions within the same ethnical group, with the clan structure. Those people share the same culture, understand each other, and the relationship between each clan is supposed to follow an old historical pattern. It's not really the same as separate ethnical groups with wholly different cultures.
Now, this clanic structure exists over large territories, much larger than an African country. And at the same time, they aren't identical depending of the place. It is fundamentally a flexible structure, whereas our notion of the state is a rigid one.
The political tradition of clanic Africa is one of mixed loyalties: loyalty to the family, to the village, to the clan, to the king (when there's one). But that's no hierarchical order: people from different clans could live in the same village, territory wasn't necessarily exclusive. Again, Africa is quite big, so it ain't the same everywhere.
The European notion of state binds the territory with its resident population and its political structure. And this bondage is extreme: borders are extremely precise, and any modification in borders is a ****ing hassle.
Whereas in clanic Africa, the political structure wasn't nearly as much bound to the territory, but to the population that belongs to the group. Say, a Coulibaly chief could order around a Coulibaly underling, but not clearly a Yatabaré.
Now, I'm not saying that clanic structure would correspond to the challenges of the modern world. Just like the Holy Roman Empire couldn't correspond either. However, by imposing a paradigm of nation states, we prevented the Africans from finding their own way to do a political system that works in today's world. And their adapatation to our system is bound to take a while still (though things seem to be improving, as the west strongly pushes for good governance nowadays).
boarders HAD to be artificial, unlike You'd like to deal with something like 10000 states in Africa. Also, even in Europe boarders were and are separating people of the same ethnicity
The problem with African borders is not so much that they separate ethnical groups, or force separate ethnical groups to live together. Actually, ethnical groups in Africa aren't as numerous as one would imagine.
The idea of a country that fits an ethnical group is typically a European one, more specifically a German one (but since you're Germany's b*tch, it's normal that you can't see through this

In places in Africa, you have political divisions within the same ethnical group, with the clan structure. Those people share the same culture, understand each other, and the relationship between each clan is supposed to follow an old historical pattern. It's not really the same as separate ethnical groups with wholly different cultures.
Now, this clanic structure exists over large territories, much larger than an African country. And at the same time, they aren't identical depending of the place. It is fundamentally a flexible structure, whereas our notion of the state is a rigid one.
The political tradition of clanic Africa is one of mixed loyalties: loyalty to the family, to the village, to the clan, to the king (when there's one). But that's no hierarchical order: people from different clans could live in the same village, territory wasn't necessarily exclusive. Again, Africa is quite big, so it ain't the same everywhere.
The European notion of state binds the territory with its resident population and its political structure. And this bondage is extreme: borders are extremely precise, and any modification in borders is a ****ing hassle.
Whereas in clanic Africa, the political structure wasn't nearly as much bound to the territory, but to the population that belongs to the group. Say, a Coulibaly chief could order around a Coulibaly underling, but not clearly a Yatabaré.
Now, I'm not saying that clanic structure would correspond to the challenges of the modern world. Just like the Holy Roman Empire couldn't correspond either. However, by imposing a paradigm of nation states, we prevented the Africans from finding their own way to do a political system that works in today's world. And their adapatation to our system is bound to take a while still (though things seem to be improving, as the west strongly pushes for good governance nowadays).
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