The White Gold: The Role of Government and State in Rehabilitating the Sugar Industry in Mozambique
研究1992年和平协议后莫桑比克制糖业的复兴,从国家、政府和行业参与者视角解释复兴原因,提出支持来自多元属性而非单一维度,并形成能协调多方利益的“中介官僚体系”。
Abstract This article examines the rehabilitation of the sugar industry in Mozambique after the General Peace Accord in 1992, engaging primarily and critically with certain aspects of the business-state literature. It explains why the sugar sector was rehabilitated from the perspectives of Mozambican state, government and industry actors. The article argues that support for the industry cannot be identified in singular and one-dimensional terms, but must include a variety of attributes of support that emerged from a post-independence fusion of industry, state and government officials' historical experiences of success and failure in the industry, and pragmatic as well as longer-term ideological stances. This, it is argued, created a ‘mediating bureaucracy’ that could broker between the diverse interests and aspirations of state/government and industry.