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This book discusses the systematic expansion of the United States
Africa Command (AFRICOM) across the continent of Africa. This book
posits that AFRICOM expansion in Africa is part of a broader system
of accumulation based on a government-business-media (GBM) complex.
Applying the concept at both structural and descriptive levels, the
GBM complex is a function of the synergy between the state's quest
for power, businesses' need for expansion, and the informational
and hegemonic functions of media actors. The United States' GBM
complex in Africa is supported-and in some locations spearheaded-by
its military, with dispossessing effects on local actors. Drawing
from African case studies, analytical accounts and empirical case
studies, this book explores AFRICOM's role within this broader
strategy. The volume maps both the methods and the scope of this
expansion, as well as local resistance to this process, and
comprises perspectives from the five regions of Africa, key
sub-regional organizations and voices from Africa's regional
hegemons. This book will be of much interest to students of
security studies, strategic studies, African politics and
International Relations.
This empirically and theoretically grounded book provides insights
into the ascendance of powers such as Turkey, South Korea and
Indonesia and their relationship with Africa. Leading scholars
present case studies from the BRICS and beyond to demonstrate the
constantly evolving and complex character of these ties and their
place in the global capitalist order. They also offer new
theoretical insights, as well as theorisation of the
spatio-temporal dynamics involved in processes of accumulation
within the African space. Their contention is that, despite their
supposed anti-imperialism, these emerging powers have become agents
for continued uneven development. This innovative edited collection
will appeal to students and scholars of international relations,
political science, development studies, area studies, geography and
economics.
This book presents a new theory explaining underdevelopment in the
global South and tests whether financial inputs, the
government-business-media (GBM) complex and spatiotemporal
influences drive human development. Despite the entrance of
emerging powers and new forms of aid, trade and investment,
international political-economic practices still support
well-established systems of capital accumulation, to the detriment
of the global South. Global asymmetrical accumulation is maintained
by 'affective' (consent-forming hegemonic practices) and
'infrastructural' (uneven economic exchanges) labours and by power
networks. The message for developing countries is that 'robust'
GBMs can facilitate human development and development is
constrained by spatiotemporal limitations. This work theorizes that
aid and foreign direct investment should be viewed with caution and
that in the global South these investments should not automatically
be assumed to be drivers of development.
This empirically and theoretically grounded book provides insights
into the ascendance of powers such as Turkey, South Korea and
Indonesia and their relationship with Africa. Leading scholars
present case studies from the BRICS and beyond to demonstrate the
constantly evolving and complex character of these ties and their
place in the global capitalist order. They also offer new
theoretical insights, as well as theorisation of the
spatio-temporal dynamics involved in processes of accumulation
within the African space. Their contention is that, despite their
supposed anti-imperialism, these emerging powers have become agents
for continued uneven development. This innovative edited collection
will appeal to students and scholars of international relations,
political science, development studies, area studies, geography and
economics.
Though initially considered a welcome counterweight to Western
interest across Africa, the BRICS are increasingly being viewed as
another example of foreign interference and exploitation. BRICS and
Resistance in Africa explores the varied forms of African
resistance being developed in response to the growing influence of
the BRICS. Its case studies cover such instances as the opposition
to China's One Belt One Road initiative in East Africa; resistance
to the BRICS' oil activities in the Niger Delta; and the role of
the BRICS in Zimbabwe's political transition. The contributors
expose the contradictions between the group's rhetoric and its real
impact, as well as the complicity of local elites in serving as
proxies for the BRICS nations. By challenging and expanding the
debates surrounding BRICS involvement in Africa, this collection
offers new insight into resistance to globalization in the global
South.
Though initially considered a welcome counterweight to Western
interest across Africa, the BRICS are increasingly being viewed as
another example of foreign interference and exploitation. BRICS and
Resistance in Africa explores the varied forms of African
resistance being developed in response to the growing influence of
the BRICS. Its case studies cover such instances as the opposition
to China's One Belt One Road initiative in East Africa; resistance
to the BRICS' oil activities in the Niger Delta; and the role of
the BRICS in Zimbabwe's political transition. The contributors
expose the contradictions between the group's rhetoric and its real
impact, as well as the complicity of local elites in serving as
proxies for the BRICS nations. By challenging and expanding the
debates surrounding BRICS involvement in Africa, this collection
offers new insight into resistance to globalization in the global
South.
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