First published 2007 by Ashgate Publishing
Reissued 2018 by Routledge
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Jeggan C. Senghor and Nana K. Poku 2007
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ISBN 13: 978-0-815-39851-6 (hbk)
ISBN 13: 978-1-351-14444-5 (ebk)
Michael Adebayo Adebiyi is a Senior Lecturer in economics at the University of Lagos, Nigeria, from where he also received his doctorate and other degrees. His research interests are in econometrics, monetary and development economics, in which subject areas he has published extensively.
Ladipo Adamolekun is a part-time Professor of Management at the Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria. He is the author/co-author or editor/co-editor of over twenty books and monographs and numerous articles and contributions to books on politics and public administration in Africa. He is editor of Public Administration: Main Issues and Selected Country Studies (1999).
Chantal Dupasquier is the Leader of the Policy Coordination and Technical Cooperation Team in the Office of Policy and Programme Coordination at the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Prior to joining the United Nations, Chantal worked as a monetary operations advisor at the international Monetary Fund, Washington, and contributed to the design and development of a new and effective monetary policy framework for Burundi.
Lawrence Flint is Executive Director of the Africa Information Centre, a research and development consultancy based in Birmingham, UK. He is also Visiting Lecturer at the Centre of African Studies, University of Copenhagen and Guest Researcher at the Department of International Development, University of Roskilde, Denmark. His current research interests include identity construction, social and environmental history of Central and Southern Africa, contemporary representations of history and heritage in Africa, climate change and adaptation strategies in the developing world.
Augustin Kwasi Fosu, is a co-editor of the Journal of African Economies (Oxford). He has been the Director of Research of the African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Nairobi, Kenya. He was also a Professor of Economics at Oakland University, Michigan, USA. Professor Fosu has served as a consultant for a number of both national and international entities. He has published numerous articles in major international academic journals on labour economics as well as on economic growth and development, focusing on the impacts of economic and political instabilities, the external sector and debt on the growth of developing economies. He has also edited several volumes/books, and contributed chapters to many others.
Mbaya J. Kankwenda is currently Director of the Congolese Institute for Development Research and Strategic Studies (CIDRESS). He is a former Professor of Economics at the Institute of Information Science and Technology at the University of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of The Congo. Prior to that he was successively General Manager, Institute of Scientific Research; Economic Adviser to the Minister of Planning; and Minister of State for National Economy and Industry.
Edward Kannyo has been an Associate Professor at SUNY, Geneseo, and is currently Associate Professor of Political Science in the College of Liberal Arts, Rochester Institute of Technology, New York (USA). His research interests include human rights, democratization and international environmental protection.
Daniel B. Ndlela is co-director of Zimconsult a private consultancy firm specializing in industrialization and trade policy (GTAP issues, WTO, EPAS), regional economic cooperation and integration, macro-economic policy/modeling, and economic planning models (World Bank/ADBs macro-modeling, CSPS), and project evaluation. He was previously Senior Lecturer in economics at the University of Zimbabwe.
Christine Obbo is a distinguished Professor of African Anthropology and has taught at a number of American Universities. She has written extensively on work, urbanisation and gender in Africa. Obbo is the author of African Women and has in the last two decades been working on HIV/AIDS and gender issues in Africa. She has also written many other articles and contributed chapters to many other books.
Anthony V. Obeng was Research and Editorial Assistant at the Encyclopedia Africana Secretariat in Accra, Ghana, followed by various professional positions at the African Training and Research Centre in Administration for Development (CAFRAD), in Tangier, Morocco. After a stint as Research Officer at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex (Brighton, England) he moved to the United Nations African Institute for Economic Development and Planning (IDEP), in Dakar, Senegal, as lecturer. In his subsequent career in the UN food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) positions held included REgional Cooperation and Liaison Officer (Regional Office, Accra) and head of its OAU/ECA Unit (Addis Ababa, Ethiopia), concurrently with the representation of FAO in Ethiopia and Djibouti.
Patrick N. Osakwe holds M.A. and Ph.D degrees in economics from Queens University, Kingston, Canada. He is currently the Leader of the Trade Policy Analysis Team in the Trade and Regional Integration Division of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Previously, he was Leader of the Macroeconomics and Finance Team in the Economic and Social Policy Division of the ECA.
Amy S. Patterson is Professor of Political Science at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She teaches African and Latin American politics, international relations, and international development. some of her published works are: The Politics of AIDS in Africa . (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers), (editor) The African State and the AIDS Crisis . Aldershot, UK: Ashgate); Power Inequalities and the Institutions of Senegalese Development Organizations. (African Studies Review 46, 3). Her research interests include the politics of HIV/AIDS in Africa, women in development, and democratization (apatters@calvin.edu).
Nana K. Poku is John Ferguson Chair and Professor of African Studies at the University of Bradford. Before joining Bradford, he was Director of the United Nations Commission on HIV/AIDS and Governance in Africa (CHGA) and Senior Advisor (Health) to the office of the United Nations Secretary General. His recent publications include: Africas AIDS Crisis: how the poor are dying (2006); Globalization and the developing World (2007) with Tony McGrew; and AIDS and Governance , (2007) with Alan Whiteside and Bjorg Sandkjaer.