Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
During the 1970s, enthusiasts for Africian – Arab solidarity emphasised the potential benefits of political co-operation and economic partnership between sub-Saharan Africa and the Arab Middle East. The interest in such a relationship gained momentum among African and Arab Head of States, culminating in their summit meeting in Cairo in March 1977. It is now time to examine both the basis of the euphoria and the prospects, or lack of them, for the development of a comprehensive and durable relationship between the contiguous regions.
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page 187 note 2 Cf. Deutsch, Karl W., The Analysis of International Relations (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1968).Google Scholar
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page 189 note 2 For the impact of the Arab slave trade on black African attitudes towards the Arabs, see Oded, Aryeh, ‘Slaves and Oil: the Arab image in Black Africa,’ in The Winer Library Bulletin (Washington, D.C.), 227, 32, 1974.Google Scholar Also see Lewis, I. M., Islam in Tropical Africa (London, 1966).Google Scholar
page 190 note 1 Mazrui, Ali A., Africa's International Relations: the diplomacy of dependence and change (Boulder, 1977), pp. 130–1.Google Scholar
page 190 note 2 See Mazrui, ‘World Culture and the Search for Human Consensus’, p. 3.
page 191 note 1 See Mazrui, Ali A., ‘Eurafrica, Eurarabia and the Tensions of Tripolarity’, in Wai, Dunstan M. (ed.), Interdependence in a World of Unequals: African—Arab—OECD triangular co-operation (Boulder, 1982).Google Scholar
page 192 note 1 For a detailed study of the conflict in the Sudan, see Wai, Dunstan M., The African—Arab Conflict in the Sudan (New York, 1980).Google Scholar
page 194 note 1 For an excellent analysis of the concept of ‘We Are All Africans’, see Mazuri, Ali A., Towards a Pax Africana: a study of ideology and ambition (London and Chicago, 1967), pp. 42–58.Google Scholar
page 195 note 1 Tripoli Radio Home Service, 11 February 1976, cited in Africa Contemporary Record, 1976–77, p. A76.
page 196 note 1 The Afro—Arab 1977 Cairo Summit Communiqué.
page 197 note 1 The black African states refused to support an Arab resolution at the 1979 O.A.U. summit in Monrovia to remove Egypt, and subsequently declined to attend a Libyan-sponsored African–Arab Heads of State meeting without Egypt.
page 199 note 1 Mazrui, Africa's International Relations, p. 151.
page 199 note 2 Ibid.
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page 201 note 1 Ibid. p. 5.
page 201 note 2 Ibid.
page 201 note 3 Ibid. p. 7.
page 202 note 1 Lyall, Michael, ‘Arab Aid to Black Africa: myth vs. reality’, in Wai, (ed.), Interdependence in a World of Unequals, p. 7.Google Scholar
page 208 note 1 Arab Bank for African Economic Development, Annual Report, 1979, (Khartoum, 1980).Google Scholar
page 208 note 2 Nasr, Z. A., ‘The Kuwait Fund and Trilateral Cooperation’, Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development, February 1977, cited in Willar Johnson, ‘African—Arab—Western Industrial Country “Trilateral” Cooperation: a note of caution’, Cambridge, Mass., 1978, p. 2.Google Scholar
page 208 note 3 That is, if the relationships and the economic transactions are based on reciprocity (mutual interests) and mutual vulnerability of all parties. For a detailed study of the evolving relationship among African, Arab, and western industrialised countries, see Wai, (ed.), Interdependence in a World of Unequals.Google Scholar
page 209 note 1 Berg, Elliot J., ‘Africa and the New International Economic Order’, University of Michigan Ann Arbor, 04 1977, mimeographed.Google Scholar
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