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引用次数: 27
摘要
Ralph Austen在《非洲经济史》(1987)一书中指出,很少有非洲国家在独立时明确选择资本主义,而对于那些选择资本主义的国家来说,这是一种默认模式或残余模式“非洲社会主义”在独立的最初几十年很流行,并被包括加纳、几内亚、塞内加尔和坦桑尼亚在内的几个国家所追求。这个词有多种含义,其拥护者很快强调他们不是共产主义者,有些人甚至说他们不是马克思主义者。本文探讨了这样一种论点,即非洲社会主义是在一代人的时间里寻找一种本土的经济发展模式,这一代人对资本主义有着合理的矛盾心理,但对冷战时期被纳入共产主义阵营持谨慎态度。重要的是,非洲社会主义的倡导者经常为他们的国家提出大胆和变革的愿景。这些愿景可能值得重新审视,没有社会主义的范式。
African socialism; or, the search for an indigenous model of economic development?
ABSTRACT Ralph Austen in African Economic History (1987) noted how few African countries explicitly choose capitalism on independence, and for those who did it was a default model or a residual pattern. ‘African socialism’ was popular in the early decades of independence and pursued by several countries, including Ghana, Guinea, Senegal and Tanzania, the cases considered in this paper. The term had multiple meanings, and its advocates were quick to stress that they were not communist, and some said they were not even Marxist. This paper explores the argument that African socialism was a search for an indigenous model of economic development for a generation that was justifiably ambivalent about capitalism, but wary of being put in the communist camp in the Cold War era. Importantly, advocates of African socialism often proposed bold and transformative visions for their countries. These visions might be worth revisiting, devoid of the paradigm of socialism.