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Big African States Angola DRC Ethiopia Nigeria South Africa Sudan

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Johannesburg Wits University Press 2001Description: 302pISBN:
  • 9781868144259
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 960.3
Summary: Western notions of statehood have tended to influence the analysis of the viability of states in Africa, particularly the view that larger states have the greater potential to sustain economic viability. Yet, against a background of much recent progress on the African continent in terms of economic development and improvements in governance, it is the larger African states which have persistently disappointed?both in terms of their own economic and political development and in terms of their ability to exert a positive influence on the region in which they are located. In this study of six African "big states," specialists across a range of disciplines analyze both the country-specific factors which have led to all but one of these states being described as dysfunctional, as well as cross-cutting issues which affect all of the big states in Africa and which may have contributed to "dysfunctionality."
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Book UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dar es Salaam 960.3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 003160

Includes index

Western notions of statehood have tended to influence the analysis of the viability of states in Africa, particularly the view that larger states have the greater potential to sustain economic viability. Yet, against a background of much recent progress on the African continent in terms of economic development and improvements in governance, it is the larger African states which have persistently disappointed?both in terms of their own economic and political development and in terms of their ability to exert a positive influence on the region in which they are located. In this study of six African "big states," specialists across a range of disciplines analyze both the country-specific factors which have led to all but one of these states being described as dysfunctional, as well as cross-cutting issues which affect all of the big states in Africa and which may have contributed to "dysfunctionality."

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