
Africa Is A Continent Of 54 Countries And Over A Billion People. However, Despite The Rich Diversity Of The African Experience, It Is Striking That Continuations And Themes Seem To Be Reflected Across The Continent, Particularly South Of The Sahara. Questions Of Underdevelopment, Outside Exploitation, And Misrule Are Characteristic Of Many - If Not Most-states In Sub-saharan Africa. In This Very Short Introduction Ian Taylor Explores How Politics Is Practiced On The African Continent, Considering The Nature Of The State In Sub-saharan Africa And Why Its State Structures Are Generally Weaker Than Elsewhere In The World. Exploring The Historical And Contemporary Factors Which Account For Africa's Underdevelopment, He Also Analyses Why Some African Countries Suffer From High Levels Of Political Violence While Others Are Spared. Unveilling The Ways In Which African State And Society Actually Function Beyond The Formal Institutional Façade, Taylor Discusses How External Factors - Both Inherited And Contemporary - Act Upon The Continent. About The Series: The Very Short Introductions Series From Oxford University Press Contains Hundreds Of Titles In Almost Every Subject Area. These Pocket-sized Books Are The Perfect Way To Get Ahead In A New Subject Quickly. Our Expert Authors Combine Facts, Analysis, Perspective, New Ideas, And Enthusiasm To Make Interesting And Challenging Topics Highly Readable.
This book investigates the fundamental question of why state structures in sub-Saharan Africa often appear weaker than those in other regions and how political practice functions beyond formal institutional frameworks. Ian R. Taylor, a professor specializing in African politics and international relations, utilizes historical analysis and contemporary political data to examine the persistent themes of underdevelopment, external exploitation, and governance challenges. The work provides a structured framework for understanding the divergence between states experiencing high levels of political violence and those that maintain relative stability.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and academics frequently cite this work as a concise, high-level entry point for students and general readers interested in the complexities of African governance. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which manages to distill vast historical and political data into a compact, accessible format.
Page Count:
152
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
ISBN-10:
0192529234
ISBN-13:
9780192529237
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