North America
Corruption in Africa – Part 1
By , Weber State University (August 2009)
Section: North America
Subjects: Imperial, Colonial, and Postcolonial History, History, Colonial History, Imperial History.
Place: Africa.
Key Topics: colonialism, imperialism.
Abstract
As Africans struggled against colonial exploitation, there was near universal agreement among the freedom fighters and other nationalists that one of the most important determinants of poverty in the colonies was the control of the instruments of economic and political governance by foreign interlopers, all of whose objectives were in conflict with those of the Africans. Colonial institutional arrangements were primarily instruments for the exploitation of Africans and their resources. Europeans came to Africa to maximize metropolitan objectives and hence, established within each colony, institutional arrangements that enhanced their ability to exploit Africans and their resources for the benefit of the metropolitan economies. With their comparative advantage in the employment of military and police force, the Europeans were able to impose on the African colonies laws and institutions that enhanced their objectives but significantly impoverished Africans. Hence, independence was considered critical not only to the elimination of the psychological effects of foreign occupation but also to the empowerment of Africans and the enhancement of their ability to take full control of their governance systems. First, independence was expected to expel the European interlopers from the continent and allow the in-coming African leaders to rid their societies of the exploitative, despotic and non-democratic institutions that had been brought to the colonies by the Europeans. In the post-independence period, Africans were expected to have full control of their own destiny, allocate their own resources, and generally take responsibility for the design and implementation of policies affecting their own welfare. Second, the new leaders were then expected to engage all relevant stakeholder groups in each country in democratic constitution making to develop and adopt locally focused, participatory, inclusive and politically and economically relevant institutional arrangements. Finally, Africa’s post-independence leaders were expected to use public policy as an instrument for the effective eradication of mass poverty and deprivation.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2009.00633.x
This article abstract has been viewed 3606 times.
Top 5 related articles
-
Intercolonial and Interimperial Relations in the Seventeenth Century
By , Texas A&M University
(Vol. 1, December 2003)
History Compass -
Recent Trends in the Historiography on Warfare in the Colonial Period (1607–1765)
By , Norwich University
(Vol. 8, April 2010)
History Compass -
Canada and the Empires of the Past
By , University of Manitoba
(Vol. 1, August 2003)
History Compass -
Some caveats about the ‘Atlantic’ paradigm
By , University at Buffalo, New York
(Vol. 1, August 2003)
History Compass -
Spatial Personas: A New Technique for Interpreting Colonial Encounters in Colonial North America
By , University of Idaho
(Vol. 6, June 2008)
History Compass
Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters
Imperialism, historical evolution
When the apologetics and ideological obfuscation are stripped away, the essence of imperialism is straightforward ...
By Clifford D. Conner
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
Imperialism, Colonialism, Postcolonialism
A general introduction to the subject(s) of “imperialism, colonialism and postcolonialism” ought to be ...
By Neil Larsen
Anti-slavery movement, British, and the founding of Sierra Leone
Europeans had visited the West African coast since the 1400s, and the area that became Sierra Leone was ...
By Kenneth Wayne Ackerson
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
Belize, national independence movement
Belize gained full independence from Great Britain in 1981, but only after a struggle that lasted nearly ...
By Edward T. Brett
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
Bengal, popular uprisings and movements in the colonial era
The state of Bangladesh came into existence only in 1971. Before August 15, 1947, present-day India, ...
By Muntassir Mamoon and Zarina Rahman Khan
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest