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		<TitleText textcase="01">Anthropologie &amp; développement n° 52, 2021</TitleText>
		
		<Subtitle textcase="01">Dossier – Les entrepreneurs et leurs associations : ethnographies du secteur privé en Afrique</Subtitle>
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		<Text language="fre" textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt;
Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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		<Text language="fre" textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt;
Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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		<Text language="fre">Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent", the view has profoundly changed. The dominant mood is decidedly positive. This issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and capitalism in Africa.</Text>
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		<Text language="eng" textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt;
Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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		<Text language="eng" textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt;
Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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		<Text language="eng">Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent", the view has profoundly changed. The dominant mood is decidedly positive. This issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and capitalism in Africa.</Text>
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		<Text textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt; Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
		
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		<Text textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent" (13 May 2000), the view has profoundly changed. At least until the pandemic, the effects of which are unclear at the present time, the dominant mood had been decidedly positive, one of “Lions on the Move”. This euphoria was supported by perceived dynamics in economic fields like agriculture, mobile phones, microfinance and supermarkets (with regard to agricultural supply chains), as well as social transformations such as urbanisation, educational expansion, improved health care and the rise of the middle classes. In this context, the focus of development policy has shifted, with Private Sector Development (PSD) as the dominant paradigm.&lt;br /&gt; Against this background, this issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and emergent (or not) capitalism in Africa. At an analytical level, our contributors study the relationship between business and politics in their specialist countries, while at a policy level, they seek to gauge the real-life effects of PSD, and in particular what kind of “business” is described and celebrated as “emerging”.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
		
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		<Text>Twenty years after The Economist called Africa "the hopeless continent", the view has profoundly changed. The dominant mood is decidedly positive. This issue aims to explore ethnographically the links between businesspeople and their associations, private sector support from the state and international development agencies and capitalism in Africa.</Text>
		
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		<Text textformat="02">&lt;p&gt;Sommaire / Contents&lt;br /&gt;
Dossier : Les entrepreneurs et leurs associations : ethnographies du secteur privé en Afrique / Entrepreneurs and business associations: Ethnographies of the private sector in Africa  7&lt;br /&gt;
Ethnographies of entrepreneurs, business associations and rentier capitalism in Africa. Introduction 9&lt;br /&gt;
Thomas Bierschenk, José-María Muñoz&lt;br /&gt;
Squandermania or Nigerian urban renaissance? 29&lt;br /&gt;
Alexander Bud&lt;br /&gt;
Les entrepreneurs camerounais face aux pouvoirs publics 51&lt;br /&gt;
Gérard Amougou&lt;br /&gt;
CTA, state, donors and entrepreneur-brokers in Mozambique 69&lt;br /&gt;
Anésio Manhiça&lt;br /&gt;
Business associations in Benin "at work" 87&lt;br /&gt;
Agnès Badou, Thomas Bierschenk&lt;br /&gt;
Fabriquer son « accès » à l'État 107&lt;br /&gt;
Sidy Cissokho&lt;br /&gt;
Les cheffes d'entreprise du Togo et la reproduction des hiérarchies politiques et sociales 125&lt;br /&gt;
Charlotte Vampo&lt;br /&gt;
Business associations at work – working for whom? Postface 143&lt;br /&gt;
Helmut Asche&lt;br /&gt;
Varia  151&lt;br /&gt;
Future horizons at the fishing harbour in San Pedro (Côte d’Ivoire) 153&lt;br /&gt;
Claire Chevallier&lt;br /&gt;
Les dispositifs éducatifs humanitaires 171&lt;br /&gt;
Marion Fresia, Andreas von Känel, Anne-Nelly Perret-Clermont&lt;br /&gt;
Ethnographie d’un dispositif technique de serres de tomates dans les Andes péruviennes 189&lt;br /&gt;
Emmanuelle Piccoli&lt;br /&gt;
L’« économie de la survie » à Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso) 207&lt;br /&gt;
Roberta Rubino&lt;br /&gt;
Lu et à lire  223&lt;br /&gt;
The Business of Development in Post-Colonial Africa (Véronique Dimier and Sarah Stockwell, eds.) 225&lt;br /&gt;
Lara Petersen&lt;br /&gt;
Du côté des thèses  229&lt;br /&gt;
Cotton and Cabaret. Domestic Economy and Female Agency in Burkina Faso 231&lt;br /&gt;
Sigrun Helmfrid&lt;br /&gt;
Le barrage de Ziga et l’invention d’une paysannerie sans terre au Burkina Faso 233&lt;br /&gt;
Kiss-Wend-Sida Romaine Zangré-Konseiga&lt;br /&gt;
Conceptualiser le « renforcement des capacités » dans la politique de développement : le cas du programme RDC-UNICEF « village assaini » au Kongo central en RDC 237&lt;br /&gt;
Pascal Sundi Mbambi&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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		<Text language="fre">The journal Anthropologie &amp; développement focuses on the dynamics of social change and the interactions between these dynamics and «development» policies and programmes.</Text>
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		<Text language="fre">&lt;p&gt;The journal Anthropologie &amp; développement focuses on the dynamics of social change and the interactions between these dynamics and «development» policies and programmes. Through in-depth qualitative research, its papers highlight the contingent processes related to the making of public polices, including the heterogeneity of actors and logics involved, and the ways that actors' behaviours shape these dynamics at different levels, as well as the issues of meanings and power, and the tensions and contradictions that permeate these processes.&lt;/p&gt;</Text>
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