Britain and Africa in the twenty-first century
Between ambition and pragmatism
Herausgeber: Beswick, Danielle; Hurt, Stephen R.; Fisher, Jonathan
Britain and Africa in the twenty-first century
Between ambition and pragmatism
Herausgeber: Beswick, Danielle; Hurt, Stephen R.; Fisher, Jonathan
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Britain and Africa in the twenty-first century offers the first book-length study of how Britainâ s relationship with Africa has fared since the fall of the 1997-2010 New Labour government. -- .
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Britain and Africa in the twenty-first century offers the first book-length study of how Britainâ s relationship with Africa has fared since the fall of the 1997-2010 New Labour government. -- .
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 248
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 418g
- ISBN-13: 9781526134134
- ISBN-10: 1526134136
- Artikelnr.: 55923219
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 248
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 418g
- ISBN-13: 9781526134134
- ISBN-10: 1526134136
- Artikelnr.: 55923219
Danielle Beswick is Senior Lecturer in the International Development Department at the University of Birmingham Jonathan Fisher is Reader in African Politics at the University of Birmingham and Research Fellow at the Centre for Gender and Africa Studies, The University of the Free State, South Africa Stephen R. Hurt is Reader in International Relations at Oxford Brookes University
Foreword - Chi Onwurah MP, Chair, All-Party Parliamentary Group for Africa
Introduction: UK Africa policy in the twenty-first century: business as
usual? - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Part I:
Africa in UK international relations: trade, aid, development and security
1 The evolution of UK policy to Sub-Saharan Africa (1997-2019) - Alex Vines
2 Africa's trade with Brexit Britain: neo-colonialism encounters
regionalism? - Mark Langan 3 The UK and Africa relations: construction of
the African Union's peace and security structures - Kasaija Phillip Apuuli
4 The securitisation of UK aid and DFID programmes in Africa: a comparative
case study of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya and
Uganda - Ivica Petrikova and Melita Lazell 5 The UK and peacekeeping
operations on the African continent - David Curran Part II: Africa and UK
actors: parties, publics and civil society 6 Rehabilitating the 'nasty
party'? The Conservative Party and Africa from opposition to government -
Danielle Beswick 7 Labour, international development and Africa: policy
rethinking in opposition - William Brown 8 The mixed fortunes of African
development campaigning under austerity and the Conservatives - Graham
Harrison 9 British campaigns for African development: the Trade Justice
Movement - Stephen R Hurt 10 International development NGOs,
representations in fundraising appeals, and public attitudes in UK-Africa
relations - Danielle Beswick, Niheer Dasandi, David Hudson and Jennifer van
Heerde-Hudson Conclusions: aspects of continuity and change after New
Labour - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Index
Introduction: UK Africa policy in the twenty-first century: business as
usual? - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Part I:
Africa in UK international relations: trade, aid, development and security
1 The evolution of UK policy to Sub-Saharan Africa (1997-2019) - Alex Vines
2 Africa's trade with Brexit Britain: neo-colonialism encounters
regionalism? - Mark Langan 3 The UK and Africa relations: construction of
the African Union's peace and security structures - Kasaija Phillip Apuuli
4 The securitisation of UK aid and DFID programmes in Africa: a comparative
case study of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya and
Uganda - Ivica Petrikova and Melita Lazell 5 The UK and peacekeeping
operations on the African continent - David Curran Part II: Africa and UK
actors: parties, publics and civil society 6 Rehabilitating the 'nasty
party'? The Conservative Party and Africa from opposition to government -
Danielle Beswick 7 Labour, international development and Africa: policy
rethinking in opposition - William Brown 8 The mixed fortunes of African
development campaigning under austerity and the Conservatives - Graham
Harrison 9 British campaigns for African development: the Trade Justice
Movement - Stephen R Hurt 10 International development NGOs,
representations in fundraising appeals, and public attitudes in UK-Africa
relations - Danielle Beswick, Niheer Dasandi, David Hudson and Jennifer van
Heerde-Hudson Conclusions: aspects of continuity and change after New
Labour - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Index
Foreword - Chi Onwurah MP, Chair, All-Party Parliamentary Group for Africa
Introduction: UK Africa policy in the twenty-first century: business as
usual? - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Part I:
Africa in UK international relations: trade, aid, development and security
1 The evolution of UK policy to Sub-Saharan Africa (1997-2019) - Alex Vines
2 Africa's trade with Brexit Britain: neo-colonialism encounters
regionalism? - Mark Langan 3 The UK and Africa relations: construction of
the African Union's peace and security structures - Kasaija Phillip Apuuli
4 The securitisation of UK aid and DFID programmes in Africa: a comparative
case study of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya and
Uganda - Ivica Petrikova and Melita Lazell 5 The UK and peacekeeping
operations on the African continent - David Curran Part II: Africa and UK
actors: parties, publics and civil society 6 Rehabilitating the 'nasty
party'? The Conservative Party and Africa from opposition to government -
Danielle Beswick 7 Labour, international development and Africa: policy
rethinking in opposition - William Brown 8 The mixed fortunes of African
development campaigning under austerity and the Conservatives - Graham
Harrison 9 British campaigns for African development: the Trade Justice
Movement - Stephen R Hurt 10 International development NGOs,
representations in fundraising appeals, and public attitudes in UK-Africa
relations - Danielle Beswick, Niheer Dasandi, David Hudson and Jennifer van
Heerde-Hudson Conclusions: aspects of continuity and change after New
Labour - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Index
Introduction: UK Africa policy in the twenty-first century: business as
usual? - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Part I:
Africa in UK international relations: trade, aid, development and security
1 The evolution of UK policy to Sub-Saharan Africa (1997-2019) - Alex Vines
2 Africa's trade with Brexit Britain: neo-colonialism encounters
regionalism? - Mark Langan 3 The UK and Africa relations: construction of
the African Union's peace and security structures - Kasaija Phillip Apuuli
4 The securitisation of UK aid and DFID programmes in Africa: a comparative
case study of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya and
Uganda - Ivica Petrikova and Melita Lazell 5 The UK and peacekeeping
operations on the African continent - David Curran Part II: Africa and UK
actors: parties, publics and civil society 6 Rehabilitating the 'nasty
party'? The Conservative Party and Africa from opposition to government -
Danielle Beswick 7 Labour, international development and Africa: policy
rethinking in opposition - William Brown 8 The mixed fortunes of African
development campaigning under austerity and the Conservatives - Graham
Harrison 9 British campaigns for African development: the Trade Justice
Movement - Stephen R Hurt 10 International development NGOs,
representations in fundraising appeals, and public attitudes in UK-Africa
relations - Danielle Beswick, Niheer Dasandi, David Hudson and Jennifer van
Heerde-Hudson Conclusions: aspects of continuity and change after New
Labour - Danielle Beswick, Jonathan Fisher and Stephen R Hurt Index