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Transnational NGO’s: A New Direction for U.S. Policy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2021

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Extract

President Bush has a unique opportunity to link U.S. development assistance with grass roots Pan-Africanism. By broadening the focus of aid policy to include relations among networks of African nongovernmental organizations (NGO’s), the Administration can begin addressing the barriers to African participation in the surge of transnationalism that will undergird economic prosperity in the 21st century. Already, the emerging global pattern is clear: In 1992 the European Community (EC) will become the West’s largest integrated market. The Gulf States, as well as the five Maghreb states of North Africa, recently announced plans for greater political and economic unity. The incorporation of Hong Kong into the People’s Republic of China holds the promise of new modalities for accommodating radically different economic and political systems within the same national boundaries. And the list will continue to grow.

Type
Focus: Issues in U.S. Policy Toward Africa, A New Administration in an Age of Transition
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1989 

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Footnotes

*

Pearl T. Robinson, Associate Professor of Political Science at Tufts University, will be at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton in 1989-90 working on problems of traditional authority and the political economy of rural development in Niger. She has served as a member of the Board of Oxfam USA, chairing the Overseas Program Committee. She is also a member of the Projects Review Board of USA for Africa Foundation (proceeds derived from the recording “We Are the World”).

References

Notes

1. Asiwaju, A. I., “The Conceptual Framework,” in Asiwaju, , ed. Partitioned Africans: Ethnic Relations Across Africa’s International Boundaries, 1884-1984, Lagos, University of Lagos Press, 1984, p. 13 Google Scholar.

2. Keohane, Robert and Nye, Joseph Jr., eds., Transnational Relations and World Politics, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1970, pp. xxvxxvi Google Scholar.

3. African NGO Conference, Dakar, Senegal, 26 May- 5 June 1987, Doc. 2-A. NGOs as Partners in Development. A Basic Document incorporating an initial framework for the creation of an African NGO Forum, p. 3.

4. Interview with Mazide N’diaye, President of FAVDO, Cambridge, USA, May 12, 1989.