webGuinée
Politique, société, économie
La première décennie du régime PDG
Victor David Du Bois (1932-1983)
The independence movement in Guinea: a study in african nationalism
Princeton University, Ph.D. Dissertation 1962 Political Science, international law and relations
University Mcrofilms, Inc. Ann Arbor, Michigan 436 p.
Victor David Du Bois (1932-1983)
Victor D. Du Bois has a particular interest in West Africa, especially the nations that once comprised French West Africa. Under a Ford Foundation Fellowship in 1959 he did the field work for a doctoral dissertation on Guinea. His research brought him into close contact with government officials, business and labor leaders, scholars, and other persons connected with or active in the Guinean political scene. As an undergraduate at Northwestern University he majored in anthropology . Shifting to the field of political science, he studied first at Northwestern and then at Princeton University which awarded him the Ph.D. in 1962. Dr. Du Bois has lectured on Africa and contributed chapters to books on African education and political affairs. He joined the American Universities Field Staff in 1962 to observe and report on developments in the newly independent French-speaking countries of Sub-Saharan Africa.
Ethnic and Cultural Disparity of the Guinean Peoples
Reduction of the Foulah Opposition
The Anti-Government Plot (1960)
The Religious Cleavage
Recruitment of Women Into the Political Process
Mobilization of the Youth
Reorganization of the National Economy
Reorientation of National Trade Policy
Reorganization of National Economic Institutions
Destruction of the Colonial Commercial Establishment
Monetary Reform: Establishment of the Guinean franc
Investissement Humain
Inauguration of a National Industrialization Program: The Kankan Conference and the Triennial Plan
Formulating a Foreign Policy
Establishment of the Relations with France and the French community
The Union with Ghana
Formation of the Union of African States.
The Commitment to Neutralism: Guinea's Role in the East-West Struggle
The Communist Plot Against Touré
Part Four Institutions of national rule
The Government
The National Government
The Administration of Local Government
The P.D.G. and the National Government
The Parti Démocratique de Guinée
Internal Party Organization
Recruitment of Party Members
Financial Sources and Controls
Democratic Centralism
The P.D.G. and Organized Labor
The Party and the Intellectual
The P.D.G and the Traditional Chiefs
The Strategy, Technique and Style of Political Action of the PDG
The Educational System
Education In French Guinea
Reform of the Educational System
Countering French Influence
English and Pan-African Unity
The Implications of Educational Reform
The Army
The Problem of Returning Veterans
Creation of the National Army
The Army as a Cohesive Force in Guinean Society
The Army and Politics
Part Five Guinea's Role in the New Africa
The Significance of Guinea's Independence
Bibliography
Appendixes
The Constitution of the Republic of Guinea (English text)
La Constitution de la République de Guinée (Texte français)
Joint Ghana-Guinea Declaration
Accords Franco-Guinéens du 7 janvier 1959
Accomplishments Under Investissement Humain, 1959-1960
Biographical Sketch of Sékou Touré
A Dissertation presented to the Faculty of Princeton University in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
Recommended for Acceptance by the Department of Politics.
March, 1962