非洲发展停滞:国际原因与对策

Pub Date : 2003-01-01 DOI:10.2307/4107322
Stephen Brown, D. Leonard, S. Straus
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引用次数: 108

摘要

大卫·k·伦纳德和斯科特·施特劳斯。非洲发展停滞:国际原因与对策。CoIo博尔德。Lynne Rienner, 2003。参考书目。索引。42.00美元。布。17.95美元。纸。《非洲的发展停滞》是一本关于非洲政治经济困境的著作,通俗易懂,价值不菲。这本书是对其中一位作者首次发表的一系列演讲的详细阐述,对非洲政治中的主要争论:地方性贫困、行政薄弱和暴力的种族冲突进行了简明总结。虽然文章不太可能重新定义非洲主义者对非洲国家和社会的理解,但作者的中心论点是明智的,尤其是对那些第一次了解非洲大陆政治的人来说,这是微妙的挑衅。伦纳德和施特劳斯没有依靠文化主义的论点来解释撒哈拉以南非洲地区看似地方性的贫困、庇护和政治不稳定,而是认为,非洲大陆脆弱国家的根源在于它们形成和随后融入国际经济的历史。他们认为,这些过程导致了政治行政机构的薄弱和缺乏嵌入,更重要的是,导致了飞地生产的普遍存在。其结果是,“产生收入实际上局限于小地区,主要市场在外部,因此飞地以外地区的总体经济健康即使不是无关紧要,也是次要的”(13)。飞地生产没有激励领导人通过纲领性改革或强有力的发展议程来建立民众的合法性。相反,领导人可以依靠税收或出口租金来维持自己的生活。更糟糕的是,飞地生产的实体场所——矿山、石油钻井平台或集中的农业地产——很容易成为潜在反叛组织的目标。一旦经历过冲突,重复暴力的可能性就会大大增加。所有这些问题,再加上国际援助的失败,导致了困扰非洲大陆的危机。国际援助除了使非洲国家免于破产之外,几乎没有什么作用。在全书的不同地方,特别是在大卫·伦纳德(David Leonard)专门撰写的关于技术援助和外国人道主义(军事)干预的两章中,作者为纠正他们所确定的情况提出了具体建议。虽然我承认这些建议是理想主义的,但它们是有充分理由的,基于确凿的证据,并且发人深省。与此同时,两位作者决心使非洲政治研究正常化,首先使这一主题易于理解,然后使其对美国学术读者高度可见。…
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Africa's Stalled Development: International Causes and Cures
David K. Leonard and Scott Strauss. Africa's Stalled Development: International Causes and Cures. Boulder, CoIo.: Lynne Rienner, 2003. Bibliography. Index. $42.00. Cloth. $17.95. Paper. Africa 's Stalled Development is an accessible and valuable contribution to the literature on Africa's troubled political economy. As the elaboration of a series of lectures first delivered by one of the authors, the book provides a concise summary of key debates in African politics: endemic poverty, administrative weakness, and violent ethnic conflict. Although the text is unlikely to redefine Africanists' understanding of African states and societies, the authors' central thesis is sensible and, especially for those first acquainting themselves with the continent's politics, subtly provocative. Rather than relying on culturalist arguments to explain sub-Saharan Africa's seemingly endemic poverty, patronage, and political instability, Leonard and Strauss posit that the root of the continent's frail states is to be found in the history of their formation and subsequent incorporation into the international economy. These processes, they argue, have resulted in the creation of weak and poorly embedded politico-administrative institutions and, more important, in the pervasiveness of enclave production. As a result, "revenue generation is physically confined to small areas, and the main markets are external, thus making the general economic health of areas outside the enclave quite secondary, if not irrelevant" (13). Enclave production provides no incentives for leaders to establish popular legitimacy through programmatic reform or a strong developmental agenda. Instead, leaders can rely on taxes or rents from exports to sustain themselves. Worse still, the physical sites for enclave production-mines, oil rigs, or concentrated agricultural estates-are easy targets for would-be rebel groups. And having once experienced conflict, the potential for repeated violence is greatly increased. all of these problems, combined with the failures of international aid, which does little more than keep African countries out of bankruptcy, have led to the crises that beset the continent. At various points throughout the book, especially in two chapters written exclusively by David Leonard on technical assistance and foreign humanitarian (military) intervention, the authors offer concrete proposals for remedying the situations they have identified. Although self-admittedly idealistic, these suggestions are well reasoned, based on solid evidence, and thought-provoking. At the same time, the authors are determined to normalize the study of African politics, first by making the subject intelligible, then by making it highly visible to an American academic audience. …
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