This article surveys recent literature on Africa and International Relations and reviews the current place of Africa within the discipline. It notes that critical debates continue around claims of a mismatch between Africa and International Relations theories and concepts. However, alongside this set of issues, there is in fact a burgeoning literature on many aspects of Africa’s international relations. While some of these studies utilise existing IR theories, and others explore empirical cases that could deliver important lessons for the wider discipline, much of this promise goes unfulfilled. The article reviews literature on China and Africa, and on HIV/AIDS governance and Africa, to illustrate how the study of African international rela...
This book discusses the applicability of Western International Relations (IR) theories to Asia and A...
African affairs contribute in shaping the world and Africa in turn is being shaped by by dynamics in...
The subject of agency in Africa’s international relations (IR) is often shrouded in generalised acco...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Harman, Sophie, and William Brown. "In f...
The Global IR research agenda lays emphasis on the marginalised, non-Western forms of power and know...
This book investigates why Africa has been marginalised in IR discipline and theory and how this iss...
South African International Relations (IR) is a prominent source of China-Africa research and analys...
The study of Africa’s international relations has for a long time been dominated by a concern to exp...
Africa has been, and continues to be, marginalised in both the practice and study of international r...
The concept of the frontier has often been used to account for the rise of Africa in international r...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in The Round Table Journa...
This article presents a reflection on the state of the discipline of International Relations (IR) in...
This article examines what it calls Africa’s International Relations (IR) historiography, an assessm...
This paper argues that international relations in Africa have changed especially in content since th...
African voices and experiences have been erased from the canon of mainstream IR theory, and even in...
This book discusses the applicability of Western International Relations (IR) theories to Asia and A...
African affairs contribute in shaping the world and Africa in turn is being shaped by by dynamics in...
The subject of agency in Africa’s international relations (IR) is often shrouded in generalised acco...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Harman, Sophie, and William Brown. "In f...
The Global IR research agenda lays emphasis on the marginalised, non-Western forms of power and know...
This book investigates why Africa has been marginalised in IR discipline and theory and how this iss...
South African International Relations (IR) is a prominent source of China-Africa research and analys...
The study of Africa’s international relations has for a long time been dominated by a concern to exp...
Africa has been, and continues to be, marginalised in both the practice and study of international r...
The concept of the frontier has often been used to account for the rise of Africa in international r...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in The Round Table Journa...
This article presents a reflection on the state of the discipline of International Relations (IR) in...
This article examines what it calls Africa’s International Relations (IR) historiography, an assessm...
This paper argues that international relations in Africa have changed especially in content since th...
African voices and experiences have been erased from the canon of mainstream IR theory, and even in...
This book discusses the applicability of Western International Relations (IR) theories to Asia and A...
African affairs contribute in shaping the world and Africa in turn is being shaped by by dynamics in...
The subject of agency in Africa’s international relations (IR) is often shrouded in generalised acco...