Politics and Governance in Africa

POL4237.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2013 Politics and Governance in Africa

Course Description

Summary

Among regions of the world, Africa is more or less unique for its large number of fragile and unstable states, poor governance, explosive social and demographic pressures, and recent hopeful economic and political transitions. This course surveys the big questions, enduring challenges, and leading theories of contemporary African politics and governance. Themes to be explored include contending scholarly perspectives on Africas developmental puzzle, the impacts of Western colonialism and major international actors and institutions, neo-patrimonial personalized rule and the criminalization of state authority, current patterns of state-society relations, the resource curse, the drivers of warfare and political violence, ongoing struggles for good democratic governance, and illustrative country case studies.

Prerequisites

At least once course in the Social Sciences.

Please contact the faculty member :

Instructor

  • Rotimi Suberu

Day and Time

TBA

Delivery Method

Unknown

Length of Course

Unknown

Academic Term

Fall 2013

Area of Study

Credits

4

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

20

Course Frequency

unknown