In most post-colonial regimes in sub-Saharan Africa, state power has been used to structure economic production in ways that have tended to produce economic stagnation rather than growth. In this book, Catherine Boone examines the ways in which the exercise of state power has inhibited economic growth, focusing on the case of Senegal. She traces changes in the political economy of Senegal from the heyday of colonial merchant capital in the 1930s to the decay of the neo-colonial merchant capital in the 1980s and reveals that old trading monopolies, commercial hierarchies and patterns of wealth accumulation were preserved at the cost of reforms that would have stimulated economic growth. Boone uses this case to develop an argument against ana...
This paper investigates the claim that colonial history has left an enduring imprint on Africa's ins...
Conventional wisdom with regard to political and economic development in Africa gives weight to the ...
Why does it seem so difficultto build a size able development a state in Africa ? A growing literatu...
Analysts of African business in the 1960s and 1970s stressed the weakness of the local private secto...
Bonin Hubert. Boone (Catherine) : Merchant capital and the roots of state power in Senegal, 1930-198...
Political and economic dynamics set in motion by efforts to consolidate post‐colonial regimes have c...
This thesis proposes a unique quantitative investigation of the long-term development of modern stat...
The marginalised state In most developing countries, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa, the role of t...
This article contributes to debates about the persistence of colonial hierarchies in global finance ...
This paper examines dynamics of state-business relations in the era of trade liberalization in Seneg...
This paper considers aspects of the development of informal firms, and their re-lationship to formal...
Over the last two decades, Senegal has experienced an unprecedented wave of large-scale land acquisi...
The relationship between capitalism and slavery has been contentious because, in the Atlantic econom...
Why does it seem so difficultto build a sizeable developmenta state in Africa? Agrowing literature l...
This paper investigates the claim that colonial history has left an enduring imprint on Africa's ins...
Conventional wisdom with regard to political and economic development in Africa gives weight to the ...
Why does it seem so difficultto build a size able development a state in Africa ? A growing literatu...
Analysts of African business in the 1960s and 1970s stressed the weakness of the local private secto...
Bonin Hubert. Boone (Catherine) : Merchant capital and the roots of state power in Senegal, 1930-198...
Political and economic dynamics set in motion by efforts to consolidate post‐colonial regimes have c...
This thesis proposes a unique quantitative investigation of the long-term development of modern stat...
The marginalised state In most developing countries, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa, the role of t...
This article contributes to debates about the persistence of colonial hierarchies in global finance ...
This paper examines dynamics of state-business relations in the era of trade liberalization in Seneg...
This paper considers aspects of the development of informal firms, and their re-lationship to formal...
Over the last two decades, Senegal has experienced an unprecedented wave of large-scale land acquisi...
The relationship between capitalism and slavery has been contentious because, in the Atlantic econom...
Why does it seem so difficultto build a sizeable developmenta state in Africa? Agrowing literature l...
This paper investigates the claim that colonial history has left an enduring imprint on Africa's ins...
Conventional wisdom with regard to political and economic development in Africa gives weight to the ...
Why does it seem so difficultto build a size able development a state in Africa ? A growing literatu...