Designing for the Bottom Billion [Slides]

President Obama, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, What is the future for AFRICOM? Reflections on “America’s New Frontline” Aljazeera Video Report by Evelyn Sallah

This article addresses one of President Obama’s key challenges concerning U.S.-Africa foreign policy inherited from the Bush administration and the U.S.’s Africa Command, widely known as AFRICOM.  A recent video report published by Aljazeera News’ America’s New Frontline focuses on the U.S. strategy to strengthen African militaries in order to combat underground militias. U.S. military officials state that those militias threaten global security. (http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/witness/2009/09/2009910121135544650.html).

The U.S.  has a problematic history in Africa, especially in regards to its military operations. For example, many recall several failed covert operations in Somalia prior to the country’s full state failure particular the deployment of 120 U.S. soldiers in October, 1993.    Furthermore, AFRICOM has undermined local liberation movements, as well as increased the military power of rogue governments whose policies stray far from democracy, transparency, or the provision of basic civil liberties. All of which are  prerequisites to good governance in a democratic political environment.

Read the rest of this entry »

Book Review-Dambisa Moyo’s Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa by Illenin Kondo

Book Review by Illenin Kondo, PhD Student in Economics at the University of Minnesota

Dambisa Moyo. Dead Aid: Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa. ISBN: 0374139563, 9780374139568. 208 pages

Summary

Nearly sixty years after their independence proclamation, most African countries have not achieved the goals of progress and emancipation that sustained their struggle for independence. In “Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa”, Dambisa Moyo is revisiting this conundrum with a focus on the role of aid in Africa’s fate. Dambisa Moyo argues that the “aid model” is failing the African continent and suggests that African governments need to innovate – or at least replicate – a different model to finance long-term economic growth. This new model should fundamentally rely on international capital markets according to Dambisa Moyo.
While Dambisa Moyo convincingly correlates some well-known artifacts of Africa’s development path and its reliance on foreign aid, her theory of aid-hindered development is less compelling. Hence, international capital markets – “the better way for Africa” – may not be the best way forward. Overall, Moyo offers an unconventional view of Africa’s way forward. The originality of her contribution lies in the radical view that aid has be totally abandoned in favor of international capital markets because its disastrous effects. However, the text constantly struggles to establish causation between aid and failure on one hand and between international capital markets and growth on the other hand.

Below, I provide an overview of Dambisa Moyo’s text and conclude with some key limitations of the solutions outlined in the text.

Aid-hindered development

Dambisa Moyo begins her book by establishing two very simple facts. First, development assistance to Africa has considerably increased since the seventies. In particular, foreign aid as a percentage of African governments’ budgets has increased. Second, despite these large aid inflows, the poverty rate in Africa substantially increased over the same period. Based on this evidence, Moyo posits the unequivocal negative externalities of aid.  To support her hypothesis, Moyo notes that aid only worked when it operated as stimulus limited in time and commitment. The Marshall plan is the perfect example of such focused stimulus. Unlike the Marshall plan, the aid provided to African countries operates in fact as a constantly available grant source (and so are the loans because of the soft repayment conditions). Given the posited negative impact of aid, Moyo calls for the adoption of an alternative financing model.

Read the rest of this entry »

Anita Wheeler’s Book Review of When Things Fell Apart: State Failure in Late-Century Africa by Robert H. Bates

 
Robert H. Bates. When Things Fell Apart: State Failure in Late-Century Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. xv + 191 pp. Graphs. Maps. Charts. Appendix. Bibliography. Index.
 
Theories of state failure have come to dominate contemporary studies on the political economy and governance of African countries. When Things Fell Apart: State Failure in Late-Century Africa by Robert H. Bates contributes to a well-established body of literature on conflict and state failure in Africa by applying game theory to explain the behavior of state actors.

 
Evoking a prominent theme in Chinua Achebe’s 1958 text Things Fall Apart, Bates presents the reader with a fable to illustrate the challenges of a ruler, his/or elite and the citizenry vying for economic and political security within their communities. The question Bates poses is whether political order can prevail amongst groups with differing interests. Bates answers with a hesitant yes; thus setting up the narrative of the text.

 
In the first part of the text, Bates elegantly distills a review of literature outlining the prevailing theories of state failure; proposes the use of game theory to explain the behavior of actors in creating political disorder, and; presents three units of analysis to measure the possibility of political order in Africa.

 
The theory attempts to explain why governments engage in predatory practices and why citizens take up arms in response. At the root of state failure, is the inability of states to collect and distribute revenues equitably among the citizenry. In a state of insecurity, communities take up arms and governments become increasingly authoritarian and repressive. Government leaders and civil servants extract money from the state revenues for their own survival and conflicts arise between the ruler, the elite and the citizenry.

 
Bates argues that the economic forces in Africa, driven by external and internal policies, have contributed to African states being a source of insecurity to their citizens. Factors such as the collection of public revenues, levels of democratization and natural resource wealth influence the possibility of political order. Political order is also predicated on the links between political competition, political conflict and political incentives. With this theoretical framework, Bates examines the choices made by state actors. Those choices, primarily the choices of “specialists of violence” or rulers and civil servants, often result in creating political and economic insecurity that induce state failure.

 
The second part of the text applies the theory periodically and thematically to a number of African countries, most notably Zambia. Bates has done extensive research in Zambia since the late 1960s. The study covers the period after independence, the Cold War, structural adjustment and the third wave of democratization (1960-1995). He uses cross-national regressions to measure and compare policy choice, political reform, and political disorder. Bates’ research concludes that changes in the global economy and economic mismanagement have led to political disorder in many African states. Even though Bates reluctantly indicates in the first chapter that political order will prevail in Africa, the data and analysis indicate that Africa has been caught in the “perfect storm.” In other words, the foundation of African states has been unstable from the outset– inevitably leading to state collapse.

 
This text expands the debates on the origins of conflict and political instability in Africa by clearly challenging the prevailing explanations of conflict– notably ethnicity, resource wealth, and democratization. Many Africanist scholars want to move beyond theories that dwell on either exogenous or endogenous factors, such as: government mismanagement, clientelism, patronage politics, corruption, state survival, and ‘big man politics.’ Bates’ theory offers a gradual movement away from the prevailing paradigms; by examining the damage, external economic shocks have on African systems. Instead of blaming individual rulers for the crisis of African states, Bates makes the case that the leaders are making choices based on the rationality of the African political and economic situation.

 
However, Bates’ analysis lacks an African perspective. This is a problem with most political science texts on Africa produced in the West. Bates’ analysis is disconnected from the complex histories and realities of African communities—most notably the detrimental role colonial policies has on the formation of the African state. Applying game theory to African politics further disconnects African peoples and communities as the primary units of analysis.

 
Bates employs a theoretical framework that reduces the complexities of Africa to rational choice based models. Fundamentally, there is no universal definition of rational choice. Nevertheless, Bates’ text is a contribution to the field because it factors in both external and internal forces in leading to Africa’s state failure. Africa does not fit neatly into a model originally designed to understand the nature of politics in post war Europe.[1] Bates offers no prescriptions to the problem instead he offers explanations. In conclusion, the text is concise, written primarily for scholars and students interested in a contemporary analysis of state failure and conflict in Africa.

 
 
Anita C. Wheeler
PhD Student
Howard University
Washington, DC

Diana Duarte on Blackness and Cape Verde

There is perhaps no issue as controversial in the discussion of Cape Verdean identity as that of race. 

As an experiment, someday I’d like to swing by one of the biggest Cape Verdean gatherings in the US—the 5th of July independence day celebration at India Point Park in Providence, RI—and conduct an informal poll.  Amidst the people enjoying the live music, playing soccer and eating katchupa, I’d pose a simple question: “Are Cape Verdeans … African?”  Or even, “Are Cape Verdeans … black?”

 I’ve never done such a poll, so my reflections here are anecdotal and certainly not scientific.  But in my limited experience, I have come across a wide range of reactions when it comes to Cape Verdean racial identity.  Colonized by the Portuguese in the 15th century and used as a colonial way-station for hundreds of years, the Cape Verdean people that emerged from this history were largely the product of Portuguese explorers and African slaves.

 Yet, for some Cape Verdeans, it’s as if the 375 miles of ocean between Cape Verde and the West African coast is enough to wipe any trace of African blood from their DNA.  The arguments tend to fall along similar lines.  Oh no, they say, you must remember the culture.  Cape Verdean culture, language, food is unique and unparalleled; but if you must draw a comparison, it would be much more European than African.

 At a library in the capital city of Praia, where I was studying documents related to the independence struggle, I once ran into an elderly man who insisted that the Cape Verdean language bore no resemblance to any African language.  In fact, he asserted that Kriolu, the term for Cape Verdean creoles, was actually a long-lost version of Portuguese, preserved as in a time capsule from the 15th century. 

 Or, they might accusingly point out, one must always remember to be proud of our Cape Verdean heritage.  It’s like a fingerprint, they seem to say—or ten fingerprints—in the middle of the Atlantic.  Nothing like it anywhere else in the world, and certainly not in Africa.

But then there’s those Cape Verdeans like my parents.  They immigrated to the US in the 1960s and 1970s and got caught in the heady moment of revolution.  On one side of the ocean, black pride was emerging, and they absorbed the words, “Black Is Beautiful.”  On the other side of the ocean, African revolutionaries were picking up their pens and their guns, and with both were saying, “This is our nation, our independence.”

In the jungles of Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verdean leader of the independence movement Amilcar Cabral worked to create a political party of African unity, bringing together Cape Verdeans and Guineans to stand against Portuguese colonialism.  (You could write a dissertation on how well he succeeded or how dismally he failed.)

In that context, my parents embraced their blackness.  Growing up under their influence, it was almost without question that I embraced mine. 

I embraced it just as I embraced my other identities.  I would be a black woman, a Cape Verdean, an American.  I would confront anyone who told me that I couldn’t be any one and all of these things.  I would be a black woman, although my strange name and my strange origins often threatened to throw it into question.  A Cape Verdean, although I never learned to speak my parents’ Kriolu and have only visited the islands twice in my life.  An American, although I have spent only a fraction of my life in this country and so much feels foreign to me here.

Every identity I have embraced has been challenged at one point or another by those who feel entitled to categorize me.  So I realize the potential irony in making the argument that Cape Verdeans should embrace their black African identity, if they are not already so inclined.  Perhaps it’s because I believe in the intersection of experiences and lives – you don’t have to choose just one.

But the real urgency lies in this: when we cut ourselves off from our many identities, we deprive ourselves.  We lose the chance to make connections, to share experiences, to realize that our fortunes are linked and to build movements.  Our Cape Verdean community—whether in the islands or in the diaspora—can’t afford to lose these chances.

Is Polygamy the Answer? by Susan Tongolo

Polygamy is defined as the condition or practice of having more than one spouse at one time.

In the numerous different cultures that populate Africa, polygamy was (and still is in some parts) the norm.

A man was judged by the number of wives that he had. Various wives offered increased prestige, economic stability, and sexual companionship. Although there were feuding and sexual jealousies, the families seemed to live in harmony.

I am not an expert and the knowledge I have only comes from reading Novels written by the likes of Chinua Achebe, Elechi Amadi, Ama Ata Aidoo and Wole Soyinka.

But according to what I have read, if a woman greeted another man in the village on her way to run errands, she was not to stop too long as it was not appropriate. Consequently, a man knew when to walk off in order not to bring shame upon the woman.

Read the rest of this entry »

Island Nation Faces African Pressure-Alvin Singh

Thousands of protesters rallied in the capital of Antanarivo recently for the return of constitutional rule under ousted president Marc Ravalomanana who was forced out of the country on March 17. 

Read the rest of this entry »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.