Journeying along the coast and across the Sahel, from Ghana to Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone to Senegal, British-Nigerian writer Adéwálé Májà-Pearce uncovers a restless region on the verge of great change. Visiting fourteen countriesand seeking out the Nigerian diaspora communities in eachhe reflects on the dramatic transformations that have shaken these societies since the late 1980s, when he first travelled their roads. From refusing IMF loans to rejecting Western-imposed currencies, West Africa's diverse, expanding and overwhelmingly young population is conducting a quiet revolution, discarding its European-dominated past and seizing control of its own future. In Nigeria, antipolice brutality demonstrations have challenged an aging elite sustained by colonial enablers who never truly left. And in Côte d'Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, popular resentment has forced the withdrawal of long-present French troops
Speaking with local journalists and dissident academics, street hawkers and immigration officers, Májà-Pearce brings to life the compelling story of a region at breaking pointas told by West Africans themselves.
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