The end of the Cold War forced Western donors to rethink their aid relations with Africa. This book looks at two of these donors, France and Britain, and asks whether the development programmes of these former colonial powers have undergone radical changes since the end of the Old World Order. It focuses on the introduction of a controversial new ‘regime’ trend – political conditionality – and uses policy models to illustrate the driving forces behind this new development strategy and explain substantial differences in France and Britain’s practice of political conditionality in Togo and Kenya. Overall, this volume – the first comparative study of French and British aid in the post-Cold War period – offers fresh insights into the evolution ...
The Series comprises two distinct parts: Thematic Dossier | Africa: 50 years of independence While...
The book reinterprets the role of the UN during the Congo crisis from 1960 to 1964, presenting a mul...
It has been over sixty (60) years since decolonization in Africa. In years gone by, a pattern has em...
The end of the Cold War forced Western donors to rethink their aid relations with Africa. This book ...
France and the United Kingdom are influential backers when it comes to the global governance of aid ...
In light of the discrepancy between Britain's and France's postcolonial security roles in Africa, wh...
France is frequently identified as the country whose official development assistance (ODA) aid progr...
This paper argues that international relations in Africa have changed especially in content since th...
This cross-national survey examines the motivations behind the allocation of foreign aid by the key ...
In light of the discrepancy between Britain’s and France’s postcolonial security roles in Africa, wh...
This edited book is a compendium of research work on France's contentious and sometimes complicated ...
There is now a considerable literature and developing body of research analysing Britain’s Africa po...
At the December 1998 Saint-Malo summit, Britain and France promised to set aside past rivalries and ...
Poverty, corruption, and conflictsa ffect many parts of Africa, but the source of these problems is ...
Although most of the studies of post-World War II intervention in Africa concentrate on the activiti...
The Series comprises two distinct parts: Thematic Dossier | Africa: 50 years of independence While...
The book reinterprets the role of the UN during the Congo crisis from 1960 to 1964, presenting a mul...
It has been over sixty (60) years since decolonization in Africa. In years gone by, a pattern has em...
The end of the Cold War forced Western donors to rethink their aid relations with Africa. This book ...
France and the United Kingdom are influential backers when it comes to the global governance of aid ...
In light of the discrepancy between Britain's and France's postcolonial security roles in Africa, wh...
France is frequently identified as the country whose official development assistance (ODA) aid progr...
This paper argues that international relations in Africa have changed especially in content since th...
This cross-national survey examines the motivations behind the allocation of foreign aid by the key ...
In light of the discrepancy between Britain’s and France’s postcolonial security roles in Africa, wh...
This edited book is a compendium of research work on France's contentious and sometimes complicated ...
There is now a considerable literature and developing body of research analysing Britain’s Africa po...
At the December 1998 Saint-Malo summit, Britain and France promised to set aside past rivalries and ...
Poverty, corruption, and conflictsa ffect many parts of Africa, but the source of these problems is ...
Although most of the studies of post-World War II intervention in Africa concentrate on the activiti...
The Series comprises two distinct parts: Thematic Dossier | Africa: 50 years of independence While...
The book reinterprets the role of the UN during the Congo crisis from 1960 to 1964, presenting a mul...
It has been over sixty (60) years since decolonization in Africa. In years gone by, a pattern has em...