Africa Yearbook Volume 11

Politics, Economy and Society South of the Sahara in 2014

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The Africa Yearbook covers major domestic political developments, the foreign policy and socio-economic trends in sub-Sahara Africa – all related to developments in one calendar year. The Yearbook contains articles on all sub-Saharan states, each of the four sub-regions (West, Central, Eastern, Southern Africa) focusing on major cross-border developments and sub-regional organizations as well as one article on continental developments and one on African-European relations. While the articles have thorough academic quality, the Yearbook is mainly oriented to the requirements of a large range of target groups: students, politicians, diplomats, administrators, journalists, teachers, practitioners in the field of development aid as well as business people.


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West Africa
Seiten: 31–40
Benin
Seiten: 41–47
Burkina Faso
Seiten: 48–55
Cabo Verde
Seiten: 56–61
Côte d’Ivoire
Seiten: 62–69
Gambia
Seiten: 70–75
Ghana
Seiten: 76–86
Guinea
Seiten: 87–94
Guinea-Bissau
Seiten: 95–101
Liberia
Seiten: 102–108
Mali
Seiten: 109–116
Mauritania
Seiten: 117–122
Niger
Seiten: 123–130
Nigeria
Seiten: 131–147
Senegal
Seiten: 148–157
Sierra Leone
Seiten: 158–163
Togo
Seiten: 164–171
Central Africa
Seiten: 173–183
Cameroon
Seiten: 184–191
Chad
Seiten: 201–208
Congo
Seiten: 209–215
Equatorial Guinea
Seiten: 230–235
Gabon
Seiten: 236–242
Eastern Africa
Seiten: 249–265
Burundi
Seiten: 266–276
Comoros
Seiten: 277–283
Djibouti
Seiten: 284–290
Eritrea
Seiten: 291–299
Ethiopia
Seiten: 300–310
Kenya
Seiten: 311–322
Rwanda
Seiten: 323–334
Seychelles
Seiten: 335–341
Somalia
Seiten: 342–350
South Sudan
Seiten: 351–358
Sudan
Seiten: 359–369
Tanzania
Seiten: 370–383
Uganda
Seiten: 384–395
Southern Africa
Seiten: 397–408
Angola
Seiten: 409–420
Botswana
Seiten: 421–428
Lesotho
Seiten: 429–434
Madagascar
Seiten: 435–442
Mauritius
Seiten: 451–456
Sebastian Elischer, Ph.D. (2010) in Comparative Politics, Jacobs University Bremen, is assistant professor of comparative politics at the Leuphana University Lüneburg and the German Institute of Global and Area Studies Hamburg. He is the author of Political Parties and Ethnicity in Africa (Cambridge University Press, 2013). He has published on institutional change and democratization in Africa.

Rolf Hofmeier, Ph.D. (1970) in Economics and Economic Geography, University of Munich, worked as economic advisor in Tanzania and was Director of the Institute of African Affairs in Hamburg 1976-2000. He has written extensively on socioeconomic issues mainly in Eastern Africa and was Editor of the (German language) Africa Yearbook 1987-2003.

Andreas Mehler, Ph.D. (1993) in Political Science, University of Hamburg, is Director of the Institute of African Affairs, German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg, and honorary Professor of Political Science at the Free University, Berlin. He has published extensively on democratisation processes and violent conflicts in West and Central Africa. With Henning Melber he is managing editor of Africa Spectrum.

Henning Melber, Ph.D. (1980) in Political Science, University of Bremen, is Senior Advisor of the Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation and of The Nordic Africa Institute in Uppsala, Sweden and Extraordinary Professor at the Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria, and the Centre for Africa Studies, University of the Free State. He has published extensively on Southern Africa and in particular Namibia. With Andreas Mehler he is managing editor of Africa Spectrum.

Preface
List of Abbreviations
Factual Overview

I. Sub-Saharan Africa (Sebastian Elischer, Rolf Hofmeier, Andreas Mehler & Henning Melber)

II. African-European Relations (Christine Hackenesc & Niels Keijzer)

III. West Africa (Sebastian Elischer)
Benin (Alexander Stroh)
Burkina Faso (Dan Eizenga)
Cape Verde (Gerhard Seibert)
Côte d’Ivoire (Alfred Babo)
Gambia (Alice Bellagamba)
Ghana (Kwesi Aning & Nancy Annan)
Guinea (Anita Schroven)
Guinea-Bissau (Christoph Kohl)
Liberia (Lansana Gberie)
Mali (Bruce Whitehouse)
Mauritania (Helena Olsson & Claes Olsson)
Niger (Klaas van Walraven)
Nigeria (Heinrich Bergstresser)
Senegal (Emanuelle Bouilly & Marie Brossier)
Sierra Leone (Krijn Peters)
Togo (Dirk Kohnert)

IV. Central Africa (Andreas Mehler)
Cameroon (Fanny Pigeaud)
Central African Republic (Andreas Mehler)
Chad (Ketil Fred Hansen)
Congo (Brett Carter)
DR Congo (Claudia Simons)
Equatorial Guinea (Joseph Mangarella)
Gabon (Douglas Yates)
São Tomé and Príncipe (Gerhard Seibert)

V. Eastern Africa (Rolf Hofmeier)
Burundi (Stef Vandeginste)
Comoros (Rolf Hofmeier)
Djibouti (Rolf Hofmeier)
Eritrea (Nicole Hirt)
Ethiopia (Jean Nicholas Bach)
Kenya (Gabrielle Lynch)
Rwanda (Susan Thomson)
Seychelles (Rolf Hofmeier)
Somalia (Stig Hansen)
South Sudan (Peter Woodward)
Sudan (Peter Woodward)
Tanzania (Kurt Hirschler & Rolf Hofmeier)
Uganda (Volker Weyel)

VI. Southern Africa (Henning Melber)
Angola (Jon Schubert)
Botswana (David Sebudubudu & Keratilwe Bodilenyane)
Lesotho (Roger Southall)
Madagascar (Richard Marcus)
Malawi (Lewis B. Dzimbiri & Tiyesere Mercy Chikapa-Jamali)
Mauritius (Klaus-Peter Treydte)
Mozambique (Joseph Hanlon)
Namibia (Henning Melber)
South Africa (Sanusha Naidu)
Swaziland (Marisha Ramdeen & Senzo Ngubane)
Zambia (Edalina Sanches)
Zimbabwe (Amin Kamete)

List of Authors



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