Africa in the Post-Decolonization EraRichard E. Bissell, Michael S. Radu Transaction Publishers, 01/01/1984 - 263 من الصفحات Addressing the changing problems and perspectives of Africa, leading Africanists examine economic, political, and ideological trends in the sub-Saharan region since the time of independence, and assess their probable impact on the future of the subcontinent. Contributors deal with such essential topics as the influence of ideology on the evolution of African politics; the role of the military in African politics; the decline in food production and economic crises as a direct threat to the continent's independence; the problem of South Africa and the U.S. position with regard to South Africa; and the failure of the African collective security system. |
المحتوى
Michael S Radu | 15 |
Henry S Bienen | 41 |
Raymond F Hopkins | 59 |
Using | 83 |
Bridging the BlackWhite Gulf | 101 |
Issues of African Diplomacy in | 137 |
and Carl G Rosberg | 157 |
Raymond W Copson | 183 |
Dennis Austin | 205 |
The | 229 |
About the Contributors | 243 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
affairs African countries African governments African international African leaders African Unity agricultural Amin Angola apartheid armed forces army assistance Benin Carter cent Chad civilian colonial conflict Congo continue cooperation coup Cuban decade decolonization dependence domestic economic development elites Ethiopia ethnic exist exports external faction food aid foreign policy FRELIMO Ghana groups growth guerrilla Guinea ideological Idi Amin important increased independence institutions interests intervention issues Ivory Coast Kenya leadership Liberia Libya major Marxist Marxist regimes ment military regimes Morocco Mozambique MPLA Namibia needs neighbors Nigeria Nkrumah non-African Nyerere organization party political population problems production programs Qaddafi radical region relations result rhetoric role rule rural Senegal social socialist society Somalia South Africa southern Africa Soviet Union strategic struggle sub-Saharan Africa SWAPO Tanzania territory Third World tion tional trade U.S. policy Uganda United violence West Western Zaire Zambia Zimbabwe