Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-01T08:55:31.437Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Africa Newly Divided?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

The map of Africa was once notorious for bearing the various colours of the European colonial powers. Today the map of post-independence Africa is newly and neatly divided between the 18 independent African states which have chosen to become associated by treaty with the European Economic Community (E.E.C.) or Common Market, and the 16 independent African states which have either rejected such an association or—as with Egypt, Ethiopia, Liberia, Libya, South Africa, and the Sudan—were never offered the possibility of becoming associated.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1964

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Page 73 note 1 Hallstein, W., reported in Afrique Express (Paris), 10 09 1963.Google Scholar

Page 73 note 2 Nkrumah, Kwame, Africa Must Unite (London, 1963), pp. 160–1.Google Scholar

Page 73 note 3 French Embassy in the U.S.A., French Economic Assistance in West and Equatorial Africa: 1948–58 (Washington, 1958).Google Scholar

Page 74 note 1 Revue des deux mondes (Paris), 08 1963.Google Scholar

Page 74 note 2 French Economic Assistance in West and Equatorial Africa: 1948–58.

Page 76 note 1 Revue des deux mondes, August 1963.

Page 76 note 2 In March 1964 the title was changed to Organisation africaine et malgache de coopération économique.

Page 77 note 1 Revue des deux mondes, August 1963.

Page 77 note 2 The progress of the negotiations and the positions of the respective parties can be followed in the 1961–2 numbers of the Bulletin mensuel de la communauté économique européenne (Brussels).

Page 78 note 1 The Netherlands sought to designate a portion of the funds for her own non-African dependencies. Surinam and the Dutch East Indies has not been included in Annex IV to the Treaty of Rome, and the Dutch were anxious that they should receive associate status. This has since been granted, with a special provision governing imports of refined oil from the Dutch East Indies.

Page 79 note 1 Relatorio e Contos do Banco de Angola (Lisbon, 1961).Google Scholar

Page 79 note 2 Revue des deux mondes, August 1963.

Page 80 note 1 ‘Parlement européen—activité, mars 1961—mai 1962’, in Pharos (E.E.C., Paris).Google Scholar

Page 81 note 1 Kwame Nkrumah, op. cit. pp. 159–62.

Page 81 note 2 The Times (London), 181909 1962.Google Scholar

Page 82 note 1 East African Common Services Organisation, Proceedings of the Central Legislative Assembly, 3rd Meeting, 1962.

Page 82 note 2 Convention of Association between the European Economic Community and the African and Malagasy States Associated with that Community and Annexed Documents; official translation published by the European Economic Community (Brussels, 1963).Google Scholar

Page 86 note 1 Le Monde (Paris), 12 03 1962.Google Scholar

Page 87 note 1 Afrique Express, 10 September 1963.

Page 88 note 1 Lemaignen, R., E.E.C. Policy Towards the Developing Countries, text of a speech delivered at the Bari Symposium on Development, 10 1961, published by the European Economic Community (Brussels, 1962).Google Scholar

Page 88 note 2 E.C.A., Industrial Growth in Africa (United Nations, New York, 1963).Google Scholar

Page 89 note 1 There are recent signs of a rapprochement between France and Guinea.