Reclaiming Africa : scramble and resistance in the 21st century
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Reclaiming Africa : scramble and resistance in the 21st century
(Advances in African economic, social and political development)
Springer, c2019
- : softcover
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: softcoverF||338.91||R32011241
Note
"Softcover re-print of the Hardcover 1st edition 2019"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book presents the findings of research conducted by scholars and activists associated with the Agrarian South Network, based mainly in Africa, Asia and Latina America. The research articulates a Southern perspective on the "new scramble" for Africa, with a view to strengthen tri-continental solidarities. The book explains the significance of the new scramble in terms of the economic structures inherited from the late-nineteenth-century scramble and the subsequent post-independence period. The renewed competition for Africa's land and natural resources and the resumption of economic growth at the turn of the millennium have revived concerns regarding the continent's position in the world economy and the prospects for its development in the twenty-first century. In this regard, the book addresses two related issues: the character of the expansion of Southern competitors in relation to the more established Western strategies; and the impact of the renewed influx of investments in land, minerals, and associated infrastructure. The findings are presented with empirical rigor and conceptual clarity, to enable the reader to grasp what really is at stake in the twenty-first century - an epic struggle to reclaim Africa from the monopolies that exercise control over its land, minerals, labour, and destiny.
Table of Contents
- The below is the table of content with the contributing authors listed. I. Introduction 1. Overview: Scramble, Primitive Accumulation and Resistance (Sam Moyo, Praveen Jha and Paris Yeros
- AIAS, JNU and University of Federal do ABC)2. Trajectories of Gender Relations (Dzodzi Tsikata, University of Ghana)3. Trajectories of Agrarian Transformation (Sam Moyo, AIAS) II. The Scramblers: Sources and Strategies 4. USA (to be identified)5. China (Beverly Silver, John Hopkins University)6. India (Praveen Jha, Santosh Kumar and Nilachala Acharya, Jawaharlal Nehru University)7. Brazil (Paris Yeros and Marcelo Rosa, University of Federal do ABC and University of Brasilia)8. South Africa (Bill Martin, Binghamton University) III. National Experiences of Primitive Accumulation and Resistance 9. Angola (Garcia Neves, University of Angola)10. Botswana (Nnyaladzi Batisani, University of Botswana)11. Ghana (Dzodzi Tsikata and Dzifa Torvikey, University of Ghana)12. Mali (Mamadou Goita, Institute of research and development, Mali)13. Senegal and Mauritania (Abdoue Ndiaye, University of Bordeaux)14. Tanzania (Ngwanza Kamata and Bernard Baha, University of Dar es Salaam)15. Uganda (Guiliano Martineillo, Makerere Institute for Social Research)16. Kenya (Nicholas Odoyo, Nairobi University)17. Zambia (Horman Chitonge, University of Cape Town)18. Zimbabwe (Sam Moyo, Walter Chambati, Freedom Mazwi & Ranga Muchetu
- AIAS) IV. Conclusion 19. Resistance, Pan-Africanism and Non-Alignment (Sam Moyo, Praveen Jha and Paris Yeros)
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