In 1956 the West African coast between southern Mauretania and western
Cameroon was lined with no less than ten European colonial territories,
along with a single independent African state. All of these colonial
units have joined Liberia in formal political independence. Their
political experiences since 1956 and indeed the forms of their present
political regimes themselves have varied very widely over this period,
from the defiant and paranoid austerity of Guinea to the gleeful surge
of Nigeria's oil-generated capitalist expansion. In political taste the
present governments cover almost the full spectrum of Third World
regimes. Yet the societies themselves have many geographical and
historical features in common, certainly far more in common than in the
case of most units studied by analysts of comparative politics. This
book was first published in 1978.