This book examines the relationship between flexible regional economic
integration in the East African Community (EAC), through its application
of variable geometry, and the establishment of the African Continental
Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a continent-wide form of integration. It
uses a historical, political, legal and economic analysis of the
processes that led to the adoption of flexible regional integration in
Africa, with particular regard to the EAC. This takes place in the
inescapable context of pan-Africanism, showing how regional integration
efforts in Africa are based on pan-Africanist ideals, and how an
evolution of these ideals has led to an evolution in the goals of
integration. With growing awareness of the weaknesses and impracticality
of consensus-based decision-making on a global level, it makes the case
for the pursuit of flexibility in multilateral trade, drawing lessons
from the experience of the AfCFTA and blocs in other regions.
This book is a historical evaluation of regional economic integration
efforts in Africa and it follows the path of attempts to integrate the
economies on the continent from colonial times to the birth of the
AfCFTA. While it is a study in law, it relies heavily on politics,
economics and history to weave together a more complete theory of
economic integration based on the African experience.
Flexible Regional Economic Integration in Africa was awarded the 2020
SIEL-Hart Prize in International Economic Law.