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This book engages in the debate on growth versus economic
transformation and the importance of industrial policy, presenting
a comprehensive framework for explaining the politics of industrial
policy. Using comparative research to theorize about the politics
of industrial policy in countries in the early stages of capitalist
transformation that also experience the pressures of elections due
to democratization, this book provides four in-depth African
country studies that illustrate the challenges to economic
transformation and the politics of implementing industrial
policies.
African Affairs is the top journal in African Studies and has been
for some time. This book draws together some of the most
influential, important, and thought provoking articles published in
its pages over the last decade. In doing so, it collates essential
cutting-edge research on Africa and makes it easily available for
students, teachers, and researchers alike. The African Affairs
Reader is broken down into four sections that cover some of the
biggest themes and questions facing the continent today, including:
the African State, the Political Economy of Development, Africa's
Relationship with the World, and Elections, Representation &
Democracy. Within each section, articles deal with some of the most
significant recent trends and events, such as the prospects for
democratization in Ghana and Nigeria, the factors underpinning
Rwanda's economic success, the rise of political corruption in
South Africa, the spread of the drugs trade, the struggle against
gender based violence, and the growing influence of China. Each
section is introduced by a new purpose-written essay by the
journal's editors that explains the evolution of the wider debate,
highlights key contributions, and suggests new ways in which the
discussion can be taken forward. Taken together, the essays and
articles included in the volume provide both a coherent
introduction to the study of Africa and a compelling commentary on
the current state of play on the continent.
This book presents an original approach to understanding the
relationship between official aid agencies and aid-receiving
African governments. The first part provides a challenge to the
hazy official claims of aid donors that they have stopped trying to
force African governments to do what 'we' think is best for 'them'
and instead are now promoting African 'ownership' of the policies
and projects which foreign aid supports. The authors tease out the
multiple meanings of the term 'ownership', demonstrating why it
became popular when it did, but also the limits to this discourse
of ownership observed in aid practices. The authors set out to
defend a particular vision of ownership--one that involves African
governments taking back control of their development policies and
priorities. Based largely on interviews with the people who do the
negotiating on both sides of the aid relationship, the country case
studies put the rhetoric of the new aid system to a more practical
test. The authors ask how donors seek to achieve their policy
objectives without being seen to push too hard, what preconditions
they place on transferring authority to African governments, and
what effect the constant discussions over development policy have
on state institutions, democracy and political culture in recipient
countries. It investigates the strategies that African states have
adopted to advance their objectives in aid negotiations and how
successful their efforts have been. Comparing the country
experiences, it points out the conditions accounting for the
varying success of eight African countries: Botswana, Ethiopia,
Ghana, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zambia. It concludes
by asking whether the conditions African countries face in aid
negotiations are changing.
Despite Ghana's strong democratic track record in recent decades,
the economy remains underdeveloped. Industrial policies are
necessary to transform the colonial trading economy that Ghana
inherited at independence, but successive governments have been
unwilling or unable to implement them. In this highly original
interpretation, supported by new empirical material, Lindsay
Whitfield exposes the reasons for why the Ghanaian economy remains
underdeveloped and sets her theory in the wider African context.
She offers a new way of thinking about the political economy of
Africa that charts a clear path away from defining Africa in terms
of neopatrimonial politics and that provides new conceptual tools
for addressing what kind of business-state relations are necessary
to drive economic development. As a study of Ghana that addresses
both the economy and politics from early colonialism to the present
day, this is a must-read for any student or scholar interested in
the political economy of development in Africa.
A team of scholars examine the radical political changes that have
taken place since 1990 in eleven key countries in Africa. Radical
changes have taken place in Africa since 1990. What are the
realities of these changes? What significant differences have
emerged between African countries? What is the future for democracy
in the continent? The editors have chosen eleven key countries to
provide enlightening comparisons and contrasts to stimulate
discussion among students. They have brought together a team of
scholars who are actively working in the changing Africa of
today.Each chapter is structured around a framing event which
defines the experience of democratisation. The editors have
provided an overview of the turning points in African politics.
They engage with debates on how to study andevaluate democracy in
Africa, such as the limits of elections. They identify four major
themes with which to examine similarities and divergences as well
as to explain change and continuity in what happened in the past.
Abdul Raufu Mustapha is University Lecturer in African Politics at
Queen Elizabeth House and Kirk-Greene Fellow at St Antony's
College, University of Oxford; Lindsay Whitfield is a Research
Fellow at the Danish Institute of International Studies,
Copenhagen.
Despite Ghana's strong democratic track record in recent decades,
the economy remains underdeveloped. Industrial policies are
necessary to transform the colonial trading economy that Ghana
inherited at independence, but successive governments have been
unwilling or unable to implement them. In this highly original
interpretation, supported by new empirical material, Lindsay
Whitfield exposes the reasons for why the Ghanaian economy remains
underdeveloped and sets her theory in the wider African context.
She offers a new way of thinking about the political economy of
Africa that charts a clear path away from defining Africa in terms
of neopatrimonial politics and that provides new conceptual tools
for addressing what kind of business-state relations are necessary
to drive economic development. As a study of Ghana that addresses
both the economy and politics from early colonialism to the present
day, this is a must-read for any student or scholar interested in
the political economy of development in Africa.
This book engages in the debate on growth versus economic
transformation and the importance of industrial policy, presenting
a comprehensive framework for explaining the politics of industrial
policy. Using comparative research to theorize about the politics
of industrial policy in countries in the early stages of capitalist
transformation that also experience the pressures of elections due
to democratization, this book provides four in-depth African
country studies that illustrate the challenges to economic
transformation and the politics of implementing industrial
policies.
A team of scholars examine the radical political changes that have
taken place since 1990 in eleven key countries in Africa. Radical
changes have taken place in Africa since 1990. What are the
realities of these changes? What significant differences have
emerged between African countries? What is the future for democracy
in the continent? The editors have chosen eleven key countries to
provide enlightening comparisons and contrasts to stimulate
discussion among students. They have brought together a team of
scholars who are actively working in the changing Africa of
today.Each chapter is structured around a framing event which
defines the experience of democratisation. The editors have
provided an overview of the turning points in African politics.
They engage with debates on how to study andevaluate democracy in
Africa, such as the limits of elections. They identify four major
themes with which to examine similarities and divergences as well
as to explain change and continuity in what happened in the past.
ABDUL RAUFU MUSTAPHA is University Lecturer in African Politics at
Queen Elizabeth House and Kirk-Greene Fellow at St Antony's
College, University of Oxford; LINDSAY WHITFIELD is a Research
Fellow at the Danish Institute of International Studies,
Copenhagen.
African Affairs is the top journal in African Studies and has been
for some time. This book draws together some of the most
influential, important, and thought provoking articles published in
its pages over the last decade. In doing so, it collates essential
cutting-edge research on Africa and makes it easily available for
students, teachers, and researchers alike. The African Affairs
Reader is broken down into four sections that cover some of the
biggest themes and questions facing the continent today, including:
the African State, the Political Economy of Development, Africa's
Relationship with the World, and Elections, Representation &
Democracy. Within each section, articles deal with some of the most
significant recent trends and events, such as the prospects for
democratization in Ghana and Nigeria, the factors underpinning
Rwanda's economic success, the rise of political corruption in
South Africa, the spread of the drugs trade, the struggle against
gender based violence, and the growing influence of China. Each
section is introduced by a new purpose-written essay by the
journal's editors that explains the evolution of the wider debate,
highlights key contributions, and suggests new ways in which the
discussion can be taken forward. Taken together, the essays and
articles included in the volume provide both a coherent
introduction to the study of Africa and a compelling commentary on
the current state of play on the continent.
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