Africa in Crisis
New Challenges and Possibilities
Alex Thomson editor Diane Frost editor Tunde Zack-Williams editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Pluto Press
Published:20th Jan '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The continent of Africa is in crisis, yet it was not always so. Following the decade of independence in the 1960s there was widespread optimism, but this almost totally disappeared in the 1980s and 1990s. Africa is faced with seemingly insurmountable problems: economic marginalisation from the global market, a major health crisis stemming from the destructive effects of malaria and HIV/AIDS and chronic political instability after a string of devastating civil wars.
This book argues that the decline in Africa's fortunes as a whole can be dated from the oil crisis and subsequent economic unrest of the late 1970s. Economic mismanagement and political authoritarianism sowed the seeds for the devastating problems of the following decades. International financial institutions incurred structural adjustment programmes over most of sub-Saharan Africa that led to the wholesale privatisation of state functions.
This lucidly detailed account pinpoints the root causes of the crisis, and asks what lies ahead for the continent in the future. Chapters cover key issues in African development, the pitfalls of democratisation, political economy and international relations.
'Succeeds in highlighting the point that Africa's crisis is not natural or inevitable, but a product of human history; a history forged in the complex interaction between locals and foreigners, states and societies, and domestic traditions and imperial pressures' -- Paul Williams, University of Birmingham, International Affairs
ISBN: 9780745316482
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 452g
240 pages