What is Africa's problem?
Material type:
TextPublication details: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, c2000.Description: xxix, 261 p. : mapISBN: - 0816632774
- 0816632782
- 9780816632770
- 9780816632787
- 320.9676
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dar es Salaam Africa | 320.9676MUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | UR010794 | |
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dar es Salaam Africa | 320.9676MUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | UR010793 | |
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dodoma Africa | 320.9676MUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | URD002595 | |
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dodoma Africa | 320.9676MUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | URD002596 |
Browsing UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dodoma shelves, Shelving location: Africa Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| 320.966POS Post-war regimes and state reconstruction in Liberia and Sierra Leone | 320.966REN Corruption and state politics in Sierra Leone | 320.9676MUS What is Africa's problem? | 320.9676MUS What is Africa's problem? | 320.967MUT Kenya's quest for democracy taming leviathan | 320.967REY Political governance in post-genocide Rwanda | 320.96ARA Sources of conflict in the post colonial African state |
Recent seismic shifts in Congo and Rwanda have exposed the continued volatility of the state of affairs in central Africa. As African states have shaken off their postcolonial despots, new leaders with sweeping ideas about a pan-African alliance have emerged-and yet the internecine struggles go on. What is Africa’s problem? As one of the leaders expressing a broad and forceful vision for Africa’s future, Uganda’s Yoweri K. Museveni is perhaps better placed than anyone in the world to address the very question his book poses.
In 1986, after more than a decade of armed struggle, a rebellion led by Museveni toppled the dictatorship of Idi Amin, and Museveni, at 42, became president of Uganda, a country at that time in near total disarray. Since then, Uganda has made remarkable strides in political, civic, and economic arenas, and Museveni has assumed the role of "the éminence grise of the new leadership in central Africa" (Philip Gourevitch, New Yorker). As such, he has proven a powerful force for change, not just in Uganda but across the turbulent span of African states.
This collection of Museveni’s writings and speeches lays out the possibilities for social change in Africa. Working with a broad historical understanding and an intimate knowledge of the problems at hand, Museveni describes how movements can be formed to foster democracy, how class consciousness can transcend tribal differences in the development of democratic institutions, and how the politics of identity operate in postcolonial Africa. Museveni’s own contributions to the overthrow of Zaire’s Mobutu Sese Seko and to the political transformation of Uganda suggest the kind of change that may sweep Africa in decades to come. What Is Africa’s Problem? gives a firsthand look at what those changes might be, how they might come about, and what they might mean.
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