List of Figures and Tables
Map of Africa
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: International Relations and Africa: A Mélange of
Metaphors, a
Dearth of Theory
Chapter 2: Africa’s Wars as New Wars: Dubious Dichotomies and
Flattening History
Chapter 3: Africa, Racism, and World Politics: Dualism and the
Persistence
of Primitivism
Chapter 4: Socialization and the Domestic Sources of Africa’s
International
Wars
Chapter 5: Africa’s International Wars: Inverted Legitimacy and
Neopatrimonial Balancing
Chapter 6: Disturbing the Peace: Africa’s International Wars and
the
Democratic Peace
Chapter 7: Liberal Trade Theory, Regional Institutionalism, and
Africa’s
International Wars
Conclusion: Towards African Realism?
References
Index
Errol A. Henderson is associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Pennsylvania State University.
This important book challenges prevailing theories of international
relations and war. Henderson offers an Afrocentric analysis of
conflict behavior of African states since independence, including
internal and international wars, informed but not bound by existing
theoretical paradigms. In the end, he demonstrates the necessity of
testing global theories in regional and other contextual settings
and of formulating approaches that do justice to their specific
historical, cultural, and institutional conditions. Using a
combination of qualitative and quantitative analyses, he contends
that African states’ conflict behavior is best explained by a
'neopatrimonial balancing thesis' that upends or modifies
conventional realist, democratic peace and liberal trade theses, at
least insofar as they apply to Africa. The research and policy
implications of Henderson’s findings are only briefly noted at the
end; they certainly invite reconsideration of the ways scholars and
policy practitioners frame and formulate their respective
approaches to addressing contemporary African conflicts. Highly
recommended for college and university libraries and collections
supporting African and international studies, peace and conflict
programs, and larger public library systems. Summing Up: Highly
recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
*Choice Reviews*
This is a virtual tour de force of the International Relations
field while also serving as a critique of much of its treatment of
conflicts and wars in Africa. The author does a thorough job in
mainstreaming Africa and elevating its relevance to IR theories. He
demonstrates that it is realism rather than liberalism or
constructivism that best depicts African approaches to
international relations in the post-colonial period. Henderson
should be congratulated on taking a bold and consistent stand as he
wades through the massive literatures on Africa and IR that
reflects his mastery of both.
*Goran Hyden, distinguished Professor emeritus, University of
Florida*
In this well-researched and highly readable book, Errol A.
Henderson presents an impressive analysis of the applicability of
international relations theory to African interstate conflicts,
particularly with respect to the debate concerning the democratic
peace thesis (DPT). In challenging some of the established ideas in
a field that tends to ignore Africa, African Realism? should appeal
to policymakers, as well as to professors and students engaged in
graduate seminars in African politics, comparative politics, and
international relations.
*Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill*
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