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The challenge of state formation and national integration is
evident, and the need for a solution is even more demanding in
places like Africa where nation states were formed under very
special historical circumstances. In Perspectives on Nation-State
Formation in Contemporary Africa, author Godknows Boladei Igali
presents a digest that examines the challenges of state formation
and national integration in Africa and off ers preferred solutions
within the context of the symbolic diversities. In this study,
Igali outlines the immediate context and challenges of national
integration in Africa in its human dimension. He reviews the
political formations of ancient Africa-which varied in size,
philosophical premise, and organisational structures-and discusses
partition, military invasions, conquest, and colonisation. He then
addresses colonial rule or administration, African nationalism, and
decolonisation and analyses the process of nation-state formation
in post-independent Africa from the perspective of the political
systems and ideologies Reviewing a wide range of time from ancient
times through the colonial period and since independence, this
survey discusses the processes of national integration and
nation-state formation in Africa, providing perspectives that
deepen the understanding of these nation-building processes.
Political communities across the world are facing tremendous
challenges in terms of trying to create An appropriate and
cooperative environment for civic existence. Despite the current
trend in international relations toward regional integration and
globalisation, the idea of properly understanding how states come
together, how they build themselves up, and what makes them
disintegrate is relevant. In Global Trends in State Formation,
author Godknows Boladei Igali offers broad insight into the
emergence of the modern state system, the disintegration of states,
and suggestions that will bring stability and peaceful coexistence
within nations. Igali, with more than thirty years of experience in
public service in Nigeria, presents a philosophical inquiry and a
historical survey into the origins of the various political
formations such as nations, nation-states, states, societies, from
the perspective of Western political and religious thought as
inspired by the state of the world in the late twentieth century as
it moved toward the twenty-first century.
Political communities across the world are facing tremendous
challenges in terms of trying to create An appropriate and
cooperative environment for civic existence. Despite the current
trend in international relations toward regional integration and
globalisation, the idea of properly understanding how states come
together, how they build themselves up, and what makes them
disintegrate is relevant. In Global Trends in State Formation,
author Godknows Boladei Igali offers broad insight into the
emergence of the modern state system, the disintegration of states,
and suggestions that will bring stability and peaceful coexistence
within nations. Igali, with more than thirty years of experience in
public service in Nigeria, presents a philosophical inquiry and a
historical survey into the origins of the various political
formations such as nations, nation-states, states, societies, from
the perspective of Western political and religious thought as
inspired by the state of the world in the late twentieth century as
it moved toward the twenty-first century.
The challenge of state formation and national integration is
evident, and the need for a solution is even more demanding in
places like Africa where nation states were formed under very
special historical circumstances. In Perspectives on Nation-State
Formation in Contemporary Africa, author Godknows Boladei Igali
presents a digest that examines the challenges of state formation
and national integration in Africa and off ers preferred solutions
within the context of the symbolic diversities. In this study,
Igali outlines the immediate context and challenges of national
integration in Africa in its human dimension. He reviews the
political formations of ancient Africa-which varied in size,
philosophical premise, and organisational structures-and discusses
partition, military invasions, conquest, and colonisation. He then
addresses colonial rule or administration, African nationalism, and
decolonisation and analyses the process of nation-state formation
in post-independent Africa from the perspective of the political
systems and ideologies Reviewing a wide range of time from ancient
times through the colonial period and since independence, this
survey discusses the processes of national integration and
nation-state formation in Africa, providing perspectives that
deepen the understanding of these nation-building processes.
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