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Globalization and Emerging Trends in African States' Foreign Policy-Making Process
A comparative perspective of Southern Africa
Edited by
Korwa Gombe Adar and Rok Ajulu
Rhodes University, South Africa
First published 2002 by Ashgate Publishing
Reissued 2018 by Routledge
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ISBN 13: 978-1-138-72613-0 (hbk)
ISBN 13: 978-1-315-19155-3 (ebk)
Editors
KORWA G. ADAR is Associate Professor of International Studies in the International Studies Unit of the Department of Political Studies, Rhodes University, South Africa. He received his MSc in Political Science from Indiana State University, and MA and PhD in International Studies from the University of South Carolina, USA. Prior to joining Rhodes University in 1997, he taught at the University of Nairobi (1987-1994) and at the United States International University-Africa, Nairobi, Kenya (1994-1997). He is the author of many book chapters as well as of articles which have appeared in numerous internationally refereed journals such as the Journal of Third World Studies; African Security Review, African Sociological Review, African Journal of Conflict Resolution; Journal of the Third World Spectrum and African Studies Quarterly. He is the author of Kenyan Foreign Policy Behavior Towards Somalia, 1963-1983 (Lanham: University Press of America, 1994) and a co-editor of The United States and Africa: From Independence to the End of the Cold War (Nairobi: East African Educational Publishers, 1995). He was the recipient of the 1992 Fulbright Research Grant for African Scholars. He is currently working on a book entitled Global Commons and Collective Interests: African States and the Law of the Sea Convention.
ROK AJULU is a Senior Lecturer in African Politics and Political Economy in the International Studies Unit of the Department of Political Studies at Rhodes University. He holds a PhD from Sussex University. He has taught at a number of universities, most recently at Leeds, before joining Rhodes in January 1994. A contributing editor to the Review of African Political Economy and an associate editor of Africa World Review , he is the author of a number of book chapters as well as of numerous articles in internationally refereed journals. He is currently working on a book on the political economy of democratisation in Kenya.
Contributors
RITA ABRAHAMSEN, Department of International Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK.
PAUL-HENRI BISCHOFF, Department of Political Studies, International Studies Unit, Rhodes University, South Africa.
ALBERT DOMSON-LINDSEY, Department of Political Studies, Rhodes University, South Africa.
JONATHAN MAYUYUKA KAUNDA, Department of Political and Administrative Studies, University of Botswana, Botswana.
ROSABELLE LAVILLE, Department of Anthropology, Rhodes University, South Africa.
GARTH LE PERE, Institute of Global Dialogue, Johannesburg, South Africa.
ASSIS MALAQUIAS, Department of Government, St Lawrence University, New York, USA.
FRANK KHACHENA MATANGA, Department of Government, University of Maseno, Kenya.
OSCAR GAKUO MWANGI, Department of Political Studies, Rhodes University, South Africa.
PHILIP NEL, Department of Political Studies, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa.
MOSES O. ONYANGO, Department of Political Studies, Rhodes University, South Africa.
PETER J. SCHRAEDER, Department of Political Science, Loyola University of Chicago, USA.
ANTHONI VAN NIEU WKERK, Department of International Relations, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.
PAUL WILLIAMS, Department of International Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK.
JAMES J. ZAFFIRO, Department of Political Science, Central College, Pella, Iowa, USA.
The authors are greatly indebted to the constructive and supportive comments offered by many reviewers on earlier drafts of this manuscript. Whilst it is not possible to mention the names of all those who provided their expertise, the following people deserve to be singled out: Fred Hendricks, Nixon Kariithi, Tawana Kupe, Paul Maylam, Robin Palmer, Roger Southall, Lynette Steenveld, Louise Vincent, and Laurence Wright, Rhodes University; Eddy Maloka, African Institute of South Africa; and Chisepo Mphaisha, University of the Western Cape.
Korwa G. Adar expresses his gratitude to Mr Jens Kapoma, Deputy Permanent Secretary (Political), Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Zambia, Mr Joe Muntanga, Deputy Principal Clerk, Zambian National Assembly, Isaac R.B. Manda, Director, Zambian Institute of Diplomacy and International Studies, for their insights on the Zambian foreign policy-making process; and Ms Ternbi C.C. Mtine, Chief Librarian, and Mr Augustine D. Lubozhya, Deputy Chief Librarian, Zambian National Assembly Library, for making it possible for me to use the National Assembly Library; and Laurent C.W. Kaela, Head of the Department of Political and Administration Studies at the University of Zambia. The further assistance of Amanda Wortmann and Zodwa Ramafalo of the African Institute of South Africa is gratefully acknowledged.