Africa
in World Politics addresses
the effects of major currents
in Africa and global politics
upon each other and the ramifications
of these interrelationships
for contemporary theories of
international and comparative
politics. This third edition
focuses on the changing state
system in sub-Saharan Africa.
The nation-state as we know
it is a legacy of European
rule in Africa, and the primacy
of the nation-state remains
a bedrock of most contemporary
theories of international relations.
Yet in the fourth decade of
Africa's independence, this
colonial inheritance is being
challenged as never before
with potentially far-reaching
implications for Africa, and
for world politics as a whole.
The authors examine a variety
of changing state systems on
the continent, ranging from
the rapidly failing Western-style
states (Rwanda, the Sudan,
and others), to new states
emerging from old ones (Eritrea
from Ethiopia), to states becoming
radically decentralized (Ethiopia,
Uganda).
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