The African Union and New Strategies for Development in Africa
Powered By Xquantum

The African Union and New Strategies for Development in Africa B ...

Chapter 1:  Introduction: Transition, Continuity, and Change
Read
image Next

This is a limited free preview of this book. Please buy full access.


  • The transition from the OAU to the AU—the marked differences and similarities between the OAU and the AU
  • An in-depth analysis of the institutions of the AU
  • The extent to which popular participation has been engendered in the institutions, programs, and policies of the continent (both political and economic)
  • The salience of history and culture in West Africa’s integration process, which undoubtedly is the most successful on the African continent
  • The comparative experience of the EU in integration exercise.
  • The key message is that context, history, institutions, experiences, and leadership are important in the consummation, as well as the successful articulation and implementation, of a regional integration project.

    The second section of the book addresses the institutional processes and developmental challenges of the African Union Project, specifically focusing on NEPAD, APRM, the involvement of civil society in the institutional architecture of the African Union, and the challenge of agricultural development and food security in Africa. This section underscores the strong interface between political and economic issues—the need to build new governance systems and processes through a self-evaluative periodic mechanism, as in the APRM. The national processes of the APRM are analyzed, as well as how the APRM connects effectively with the economic agenda of NEPAD. Indeed, APRM is a component of NEPAD. The issue of agricultural development is particularly singled out—in terms of the major challenges confronting the NEPAD initiative—because of Africa’s decreasing level of agricultural productivity, alarming problem of food importation, and food insecurity. How far can NEPAD boost agricultural productivity on the African continent? The engagement of the civil society in the institutional architecture of the AU are discussed, including the AU commission, ECOSOCC, Pan-African Parliament, and other key institutions. A major challenge for Africa’s integration process is how to build a regional community not only of governments, but also of peoples—an African Union or a union government owned, driven, and shaped by the people of the continent and the African diaspora.