The rise of a regional institution in Africa : agency and policy-formation within the ECOWAS Commission
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The rise of a regional institution in Africa : agency and policy-formation within the ECOWAS Commission
(Routledge studies on African politics and international relations)
Routledge, 2023
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book focuses on the ECOWAS Commission, both as an autonomous actor, as well as a policy-making nexus for its member states and external actors.
Drawing from a variety of never-before analyzed sources, unpublished internal documents and over 120 interviews with staff from the ECOWAS Commission, its member states, and external actors supporting the organization, this book presents a comprehensive portrait of ECOWAS's institutional capabilities, challenges, and reforms. It utilizes a policy studies approach focusing on the areas of political affairs, peace, and regional security, as well as trade and customs to illustrate concrete cases of policy making. In doing so, the book provides practice-oriented insights into the policy-making agency within the organization, arguing for the significance of the ECOWAS Commission as an actor.
This book will be of interest to scholars and students of West Africa and its international relations, comparative regionalism, international organization studies, development studies, policy-making, peace and conflict studies, governance and more broadly to African politics and international relations.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction 2. Analyzing Policy-Making Agency in ECOWAS 3. Delegating Policy Making: ECOWAS Member States and their Commission 4. Driving Policy Making: Commission Agency in Trade and Customs 5. Supporting Policy Making: External Actors' Agency in Trade and Customs 6. Driving Policy Making: Commission Agency in Political Affairs, Peace and Regional Security 7. Supporting Policy Making: External Actors' Agency in Political Affairs, Peace and Regional Security 8. Conclusion
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