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Prospects for Future Superpower Intervention in Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2021

Extract

Conjecture on any aspect of future events in Africa is hazardous; applied to politics, it may be altogether unsafe. Yet one cannot avoid looking into the future in some way. In essence our guesswork consists of extrapolations based upon trend analysis. A number of present events and forces display characteristics that suggest persistence. The convergence of the forces and their persistence offer reasonable basis for projections into the future.

Judging by the nature of past superpower involvements in Africa, it is easy to make a case for future interventions by both superpowers and intermediate (European) powers in Africa beyond the year 2000.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1978 

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References

Notes

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2. Building capitalism in LDCs “meant building elites; and building elites meant building intra-ethnic [inter-ethnic] rivalries among elites; so that this model of nationalism invariably prompted its natural heir, micro-nationalism or ‘tribalism’.”

3. Africa Guide, 1977, p. 84.

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12. Farer, pp. 136-53.

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