Travel Guide | September 6, 2010 A new book: ‘Why Ethiopia Remains Poor’ Author: Melakou Tegegn | September 6, 2010 Structural and Conjunctural Constraints for the Emergence of a Civil Society in Ethiopia: 1991-2005 Lambert Academic Publishers (Germany), 2010 This book examines the constraints that inhibit the emergence of a civil society and democracy in Ethiopia during the EPRDF period, 1991-2005. Freedom and democracy are taken as precondition for development and social transformation. It introduces a conceptual construct on synergizing three political and sociological categories, namely1 the state and society relationship2, freedom and democracy, and [3] development, – poverty eradication, social change and social transformation in transitional societies,- placing freedom as a pivotal link. The thesis establishes a marked continuum in the modalities of state and society relationship throughout the three post-War governments. It examines the current state/society relationship and highlights lack of freedom as the major constraint. This is examined against the backdrop of what the historical realm for social change in post- War Ethiopia was supposed to be. It examines the policies of the current government (EPRDF) on non-state organizations, the irrational viewpoint it advances and how the basic perceptions that the ruling party held back in 1975 haven’t changed. It holds that the government exacerbated the problem of the fragile relationship it had with society. Why Ethiopia Remains Poor also examines the government’s perception on ethnicity as the ‘rational’ that governs the functions of its institutions of governance and deconstructs EPRRDF’s “revolutionary democracy”, the dichotomy between quality and quantity as well as between cadres and experts. It also deconstructs the EPRDF’s thesis on the “national question” both in terms of its claims to have proceeded from the positions of the old student movement on the one hand and from the Marxian theoretical perception on the other. The analysis is extended to examine the development challenges that Ethiopia currently faces. Four major development challenges are advanced for examination: gender, environment, rural development and population. A chapter is devoted exclusively to gender while the other three domains of sustainable development, i.e. environment, rural development and population, are analyzed in one Chapter. The thesis concludes that the EPRDF has failed to resolve these structural problems and has no capacity to do so. EPRDF’s exclusion of the nascent ‘civil society’, suppression of freedom in general is taken as the main factors behind the failure. — Note: the book can be ordered online from Amazon.com. The publishers put the price at 79 Euro or $98 at current exchange rate. Ethiomedia.com – An African-American news and views website. Copyright 2010 Ethiomedia.com. Email: [email protected] Botswana Ethiopian rebels warn foreign firms are in danger