In 1947 a group of Yoruba-speaking fishermen who had been persecuted because of their religious beliefs founded their own community in order to worship in peace. Although located in an impoverished part of Nigeria, within a few years the village enjoyed remarkable economic success. This was partly because the fishermen held all goods in common, pooled the profits in the community treasury, and attempted to reduce the importance of the family and marriage. After about a generation the utopia began to fall apart. The early religious zeal faded, private enterprise replaced communalism, and the family became strong once more. In an attempt to explain the initial success and eventual decline of the utopia, the author compares it with neighbouring villages that embraced similar religious beliefs but did not enjoy the same economic success. He sets the problem firmly in a broad comparative framework and draws the implications for theories of development, especially Weber’s Protestant ethic thesis.

Formato
EPUB
Protección
Watermark
Fecha de publicación
1 de enero de 2006
Editor
Número de páginas
270
Idioma
Inglés
ePub ISBN
9780889204911
PDF ISBN
9780889208858
ISBN papel
9780889200531
Tamaño del archivo
1 MB
EPUB
EPUB accesibilidad

Funciones de accesibilidad

  • Tabla de contenidos navegable
suscribir

Sobre nosotros

Sobre De Marque Trabajos Contacta con nosotros Condiciones generales de utilización Política de privacidad Feedbooks.com is operated by the Diffusion Champlain SASU company