13FRANCIS NGUENDI IKOME • PAPER 233 • MAY Institute of African Studies, 1969; P Engelbert, S Tarango et al, Dismemberment and suffocation a contribution to the
debate on African boundaries,
Comparative Political Studies 35(10) (December 2002).
3 FN Ikome, The inviolability of Africa’s colonial boundaries lessons from the Cameroon–Nigeria border conflict, Occasional Paper 47
, Johannesburg IGD, 2004, 8; A Ajala, The origins of African boundaries,
The Nigerian Forum,
Lagos:Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA),
September/October 1981.
4 For interesting insights on the different meanings of boundaries, see variously Lord Curzon,
Frontiers, Oxford Clarendon Press, 1907; TS Murty,
Frontiers, a changing concept,
New Delhi Palit and Palit, 1978; Ikome, The inviolability of Africa’s colonial boundaries, 15; AI Asiwaju, Borders and national defence an analysis, in B Ate and B
Akinterinwa (eds,
Nigeria and its immediate neighbours constraints and prospects of sub-regional security in the 1990s, Lagos NIIA, 1992, 31; Lauterpacht (ed,
International law, Cambridge University of Cambridge Press, 1955, 53.
5 For some interesting perspectives on the functions of boundaries and their relation to the formation of various state systems, see Friedrich Kratochwil, Of systems, boundaries, and territoriality an inquiry into the formation of the state system,
World Politics, 39(1) (October
1986), 27–52.
6 RR
Laremont,
Borders, nationalism and the African state, Boulder and London Lynne Reiner, 2005, 1−2.
7 SE Finer,
State building, state boundaries, and border control,
Social Science Information 13 (4/5) (1974), 79.
8 Max Weber, Politics as avocation, in HH Gerth and C Wright Mills (eds,
From Max Weber essays in sociology, New York Oxford University Press, 1958, 78.
9 Nugent and Asiwaju,
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