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THE GATHERING STORM Essays on Tanzania’s Crisis of Governance, Justice, and Institutional Trust
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235599321
- EAN9798235599321
- Date de parution23/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
"Casting lots settles disputes and keeps strong opponents apart." - Proverbs 18:18What happens when the price of peace is silence?For decades, Tanzania stood as a symbol of stability, nation-building, and African self-determination. The ideals of the Arusha Declaration-justice, equality, self-reliance, and leadership in service of the public good-shaped a national identity admired across the continent.
But beneath the surface of stability, profound questions have emerged about the relationship between state power and citizen dignity. In the aftermath of the disputed 2025 elections and the political tensions that followed, Tanzania entered a period of intense debate over governance, accountability, and the meaning of citizenship itself. Allegations of political repression, institutional weakness, economic exclusion, and declining public trust have exposed a widening gap between constitutional promises and lived realities.
The Price of Peace brings together thirty-five interconnected essays examining the forces reshaping Tanzania:. When survival is criminalised and workers demanding economic justice are treated as threats . When the dignity of the dead reveals the inequality of the living . When institutions meant to protect citizens struggle to maintain public trust . When political power and economic privilege become increasingly intertwined .
When the law risks becoming a tool of control rather than an instrument of justiceDrawing on historical analysis, governance research, human rights documentation, economic debates, and comparative African experiences, this collection explores one central question:Can lasting peace exist without justice?The essays argue that stability built only on control cannot endure. Sustainable peace requires institutions that citizens trust, accountability that applies equally, economic opportunities that include the majority, and a renewed social contract between state and society.
Neither a rejection of Tanzania's achievements nor a simple catalogue of failures, The Gathering Storm is an examination of a nation at a critical moment-and a call to recover the principles of dignity, fairness, and shared prosperity. Essential reading for policymakers, scholars, students, civil society actors, and anyone seeking to understand Tanzania's democratic journey and Africa's broader struggle for accountable governance.
Peace is not merely the absence of conflict. It is the presence of justice.
But beneath the surface of stability, profound questions have emerged about the relationship between state power and citizen dignity. In the aftermath of the disputed 2025 elections and the political tensions that followed, Tanzania entered a period of intense debate over governance, accountability, and the meaning of citizenship itself. Allegations of political repression, institutional weakness, economic exclusion, and declining public trust have exposed a widening gap between constitutional promises and lived realities.
The Price of Peace brings together thirty-five interconnected essays examining the forces reshaping Tanzania:. When survival is criminalised and workers demanding economic justice are treated as threats . When the dignity of the dead reveals the inequality of the living . When institutions meant to protect citizens struggle to maintain public trust . When political power and economic privilege become increasingly intertwined .
When the law risks becoming a tool of control rather than an instrument of justiceDrawing on historical analysis, governance research, human rights documentation, economic debates, and comparative African experiences, this collection explores one central question:Can lasting peace exist without justice?The essays argue that stability built only on control cannot endure. Sustainable peace requires institutions that citizens trust, accountability that applies equally, economic opportunities that include the majority, and a renewed social contract between state and society.
Neither a rejection of Tanzania's achievements nor a simple catalogue of failures, The Gathering Storm is an examination of a nation at a critical moment-and a call to recover the principles of dignity, fairness, and shared prosperity. Essential reading for policymakers, scholars, students, civil society actors, and anyone seeking to understand Tanzania's democratic journey and Africa's broader struggle for accountable governance.
Peace is not merely the absence of conflict. It is the presence of justice.






















