Power in Africa casts a fresh look at contemporary Black African
politics. It reviews the merits and failings of existing interpretations
of Africa's post-colonial society and proposes a new approach to its
understanding. It has two main aims. First, to present a comparative
conceptual framework which places Africa's politics within their
appropriate historical context. Second, to offer an explanation of what
is actually happening in Africa--beyond the cliches of a dark continent
perennially in crisis. No one can deny that today Africa is in crisis.
Wars, coups, famines and violence stalk the continent and fill the pages
of our newspapers. Africa's debt is astronomical, economic development
has virtually ceased, corruption is endemic and force seems the chief
instrument of politics. Our understanding of that crisis, however, has
often been hampered by the conceptual frameworks we have used to explain
it. Power in Africa develops a political analysis which attempts to
construct a plausible interpretation of Africa's contemporary
predicament.