Country: Liberia

Group: Mano

Date Finalized: 4/25/2020

Team: Vianney Mancilla (lead), Erika Walker, Colleen Clauss

The Mano people make up approximately 7.9% of the population in Liberia (Minority Rights Watch, n.d.). According to Minority Rights Group, the Mano people largely accepted the rule of the Americo-Liberians (n.d.). The rule of the Americo-Liberian minority is described as “oppressive” and began since Liberia’s independence in 1847 (Refugee Review Tribunal, 2010).  In 1980, Samuel Doe and the Armed Forces of Liberia’s coup overthrew the rule of the Americo-Liberians (Refugee Review Tribunal, 2010). Doe’s coup was marked by a “violent ethnocide against those of Gio or Mano descent” (Refugee Review Tribunal, 2010). This was based on the “politicization of the Krahn (Doe’s own tribal group) against the Dan and Mano people” (Bulmer & Solomos, 2004). About 160,000 people had fled into neighboring Guinea and Côte d’Ivoire, this marked the beginning of a refugee crisis which led to the displacement of approximately one-third of the total population by late 1990 (Minority Rights Watch, n.d.). The “violent ethnocide” the Mano experienced lacked details; nonetheless, the group was displaced in large numbers and specifically targeted during Doe’s rule. The data quality for the Mano would be a 1 for the lack of specifics.

Sources

  1. Bulmer, M., & Solomos, J. (2004). Researching race and racism. Routledge.
  2. Minority Rights Group (n.d.), Liberia. Retrieved from https://minorityrights.org/country/liberia/
  3. Refugee Review Tribunal. (2010). Liberia. Australian Government. https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/eoir/legacy/2013/06/11/NPP-NPFL-INPFL.pdf