<ul> <li> Approaches post-genocide governance citizenship and nation building through a unique lens &ndash; the local uses of the concept of <em>ubumwe</em> or unity.</li> <li> Outlines the productive ambiguity at the root of this concept by tracing its deployments in diverse arenas from rhetoric office work street talk to camp showing in detail how politics and state power interlace with the nation-building project.</li> <li> Discusses in detail the nature and effects of state reach and state presence in people&rsquo;s everyday lives.</li> <li> Highlights and explains the centrality of civic education in the post-genocide social transformation project.</li> <li> Offers the first in-depth look at the <em>ingando</em> camps their emergence post-genocide their different types and the objectives they serve and importantly an inside look at the space itself and the experience it fosters.</li></ul>