African Foreign Policies - Selecting Signifiers to Explain Agency

by Paul-Henri Bischoff (Editor)

Paperback, 2022

Status

Available

Call number

327.6

Publication

New York ; Routledge, First published 2020, First paperback edition 2022

Description

"This book explores, at a time when several powers have become serious players on the continent, aspects of African agency, past and present, by African writers on foreign policy, representative of geography, language and state size. In the past, African foreign policy has largely been considered within the context of reactions to the international or global 'external factor'. This ground-breaking book, however, looks at how foreign policy has been crafted and used in response not just to external, but also, mainly, domestic imperatives or (theoretical) signifiers. As such, it narrates individual and changing foreign policy orientations over time - and as far back as independence - with mainly African-based scholars who present their own constructs of what is a useful theoretical narrative regarding foreign policy on the continent - how theory is adapted to local circumstance or substituted for continentally based ontologies. The book therefore contends that the African experience carries valuable import for expanding general understandings of foreign policy in general. This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of Foreign Policy Analysis, Foreign Policy Studies, African International Relations/Politics/Studies, Diplomacy and more broadly to International Relations"--… (more)

Language

Physical description

xix, 267 p.; 23.3 cm

ISBN

9780367348281

Local notes

Towards a strategic culture approach to understanding and conceptualising Ethiopia's foreign policy towards Israel and the Middle Eastern Arab countries by Makonnen Tesfaye
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