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This book provides a comprehensive overview of post-war labour
market reconstructions, in the context of a regional bloc whose
member states have experienced conflict. Focusing on the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) region, the book explores how
major conflicts often expose shortcomings in affected countries
particularly on their post-war labour market reconstruction
processes. The authors discuss how countries in the SADC region in
particular are equipped to navigate such processes. This key
question drives the overview of relationships between labour market
issues and wars of liberation from colonial rule and apartheid,
rights to self-determination and racial (in)equality and the need
to succinctly explain how labour market issues shaped civil wars in
some post-independent SADC member states. The book examines the
role of the state in reconstruction processes of post-war labour
markets and the contribution of labour market institutions to these
reconstructions. It further analyses private sector participation
in remaking labour markets and workers’ experiences in finding
employment in labour markets under reconstruction. The book
provides specific insights from experiences in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC).
This book examines regional integration in Africa, with a
particular focus on the Southern African Development Community
(SADC). It argues that the SADC's pursuit of a rationalist and
state-centric form of integration for Southern Africa is limited,
as it overlooks the contributory role and efficacy of non-state
actors, who are relegated to the periphery. The book demonstrates
that civil society networks in Southern Africa constitute
well-governed, self-organised entities that function just like
formal regional arrangements driven by state actors and
technocrats. The book amplifies this point by deploying New
Institutionalism and the New Regionalism Approach to examine the
role and efficacy of non-state actors in building regions from
below. The book develops a unique typology that shows how Southern
African regional civil society networks adopt strategies, norms and
rules to establish an efficient form of alternative integration in
the region. Based on a critical analysis of this self-organised
regionalism, the book projects the reality that alternative
regionalism driven by non-state actors is possible. This book
expands the study of regionalism in the SADC, and makes a
significant and innovative contribution to the study of
contemporary regionalism.
The book reconsiders the ways in which actors in the
Africa-European Union relationship function, and what that means
for regionalism, regionalisation, and regional integration. In
addition to formalised state-to-state and inter-regional
interactions, the book examines the impact of socioeconomic and
political interactions with non-state actors, including those who
engage with regional integration through formal and informal
processes such as civil society activitists, "African migration
evangelists", human smugglers and human traffickers. The book is
authored from an African perspective and will be of interest to
academics who specialise in International Relations, Political
Economy, Political Sociology and African Studies.
This book examines regional integration in Africa, with a
particular focus on the Southern African Development Community
(SADC). It argues that the SADC's pursuit of a rationalist and
state-centric form of integration for Southern Africa is limited,
as it overlooks the contributory role and efficacy of non-state
actors, who are relegated to the periphery. The book demonstrates
that civil society networks in Southern Africa constitute
well-governed, self-organised entities that function just like
formal regional arrangements driven by state actors and
technocrats. The book amplifies this point by deploying New
Institutionalism and the New Regionalism Approach to examine the
role and efficacy of non-state actors in building regions from
below. The book develops a unique typology that shows how Southern
African regional civil society networks adopt strategies, norms and
rules to establish an efficient form of alternative integration in
the region. Based on a critical analysis of this self-organised
regionalism, the book projects the reality that alternative
regionalism driven by non-state actors is possible. This book
expands the study of regionalism in the SADC, and makes a
significant and innovative contribution to the study of
contemporary regionalism.
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