Let Your Words Be Few: Symbolism of Speaking and Silence among Seventeenth-Century Quakers . Richard Bauman

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Land was one of the central issues contributing to the recent civil wars in the Sudan, and it is an underestimated and overlooked factor determining the success or failure of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) signed in 2005. Land has been central to the Sudan’s colonial and post-colonial development policies, and land access and land rights legislation changed as development policy changed. The systematic erosion of customary rights to land and access to land were powerful factors which drew different peoples on both sides of the North-South divide into the wider conflict, so that by the time the North-South war ended in 2005 what the ‘marginalized’ peoples of the South, East and West had in common was dispossession from their land through government encroachment. Land was ethnicized during the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium, was progressively de-ethnicized immediately prior to and during the conflicts, and is now being selectively re-ethnicized along parts of the North-South border. There is a direct conflict between customary land regimes and the development policies of the central government that has yet to be resolved, or even directly addressed, by either the Government of National Unity or the Government of South Sudan created by the CPA.

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