This book encompasses a history of identity-building amongst Khwe San
people, and of contestations for authority over land and natural
resources in Namibia's West Caprivi. The politics of authority in this
contested borderland area were significantly shaped by state and NGO
interventions into local institutions and land use between the late
1930s and 2006. Julie J. Taylor pays close attention to the role of NGOs
in these processes. She shows that, in their relationship with West
Caprivi's residents, NGOs unintentionally contributed towards the
hardening and politicising of ethnic difference, including through the
implementation of land mapping projects. At the same time, in their
relationship with the state, NGOs often worked to "depoliticise"
struggles over authority, thus inadvertently reinforcing the state's
authority in the area.