Foreign Policy Blogs

Sub-Saharan Africa

Quarterfinals Drawn

Quarterfinals Drawn

They are down to the quarterfinals in the Africa Cup of Nations. Tomorrow the hosts, Angola, will face off against World Cup-bound Ghana and Ivory Coast and Algeria, both also South Africa bound, will play. On Monday Egypt and Cameroon will meet in a contest between a team bound for this year’s world championship (Cameroon) […]

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Freedom's Fickle Fate

Freedom's Fickle Fate

From The Economist via Andrew Sullivan: The obvious global narrative here is that we have actually seen a rollback of freedom in the last decade or so. But there are two notable exceptions: South America and, to a lesser extent, Africa. For example, the map shows the Democratic Republic of the Congo as having backslid […]

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Skeptical Me

Please forgive my unalloyed cynicism, but is there anyone who believes Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir when he says that Sudan would accept a decision to secede on the part of the country’s southerners? Does Bashir even believe it?

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Angola: Reform or Rigging?

Angola has changed its Constitution, and in so doing has transformed the way by which the country will choose its president. The country will no longer hold direct elections for president, instead giving the presidency to the leader of the parliamentary party with the most seats. In theory this is not, as critics claim, anti-democratic. […]

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RFK in SA

At the FPA’s Global Engagement Blog James Ketterer has a great post on Robert Kennedy’s June 1966 trip to South Africa. I once used Kennedy’s speech as a framing device for a journal article on teaching a course on race relations in the United States and South Africa.  (The piece was republished here.) I agree […]

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(Mis)Representing Kenya

The latest issue of The American Interest has a somewhat lengthy article on Kenya from Economist online contributor Misha Mintz-Roth. “Skin-Deep Democracy: A Letter From Kenya” reveals some of the strengths but also many of the weaknesses of contemporary reportage from Africa. Mintz-Roth spent time with the locals, provides some nifty descriptions and puts forward […]

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Foreign Policy Initiative

I would encourage all of you to check out The Foreign Policy Initiative. So far there is not a whole lot of breadth or depth of Africa coverage, but hopefully that will come. I’m adding it to my blogroll in hopes that it does.

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Africa 2009 Year in Review

FPA Africa 2009 Year in Review Overview: It is a fool’s errand to try to summarize the events of an entire continent of 53 nation states and hundreds of millions of people in a few hundred words. Nonetheless, there are some generalizations that hold for the continent, particularly for its politics and international relations. Sadly some […]

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Nigeria's Impending Crisis?

Reports indicate that Nigerian President Umaru Yar’Adua is suffering from brain damage and cannot recognize his wife, never mind govern the country. Suffice it to say that the situation has fast created a leadership vacuum. And if we know anything it is that leadership vacuums create political crises.

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Tragedy at the Africa Cup of Nations

Tragedy at the Africa Cup of Nations

Story Updated Below Stunning news from Angola on the eve of the kickoff of the Africa Cup of Nations. Gunmen, almost certainly rebels, opened fire with machine guns on a bus carrying Togo’s national football team to the province of Cabinda from its training ground in the Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville). The bus driver is […]

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Yar'Adua Still AWOL

Nigerian President Umaru Yar’Adua continues to be nowhere to be found. Yar’Adua, who has continued to suffer health problems and whose absence has caused rumors to swirl, has been missing for six weeks, since November 23. Nigerian opposition parties are beginning to ask questions, and understandably so. A serious political crisis in Nigeria could be […]

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TSA = Terrorism Stupidity? Apparently

I was all set to explain why the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) knee-jerk response to recent (and undoubtedly serious) terrorist activity is incredibly dumb. Texas in Africa beat me to it. I will just add that this silly (and almost sure not actually to make us any safer) policy will also assuredly damage relations with […]

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Happy New Year!

It’s been a chaotic couple of weeks for me and so as a consequence it has been a quiet couple of weeks at the Africa Blog. But I assure you that things are going to pick up soon. I’ll have my annual Year in Review piece posted and will return to regular posting by tomorrow. May […]

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FPA's GFR Blog on Invictus

At the FPA’s Global Film Review Blog Sean Patrick Murphy reviews Invictus. I am working on an essay on the movie, the book on which it is based, and another book on South African sport and Apartheid which I will share with you as soon as it is published.

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Disunity in South Africa (Self Indulgence Alert)

Recently the Foreign Policy Association published a “Viewpoints” piece of mine titled “Disunity in South Africa.” Please check it out if you have any interest in South African politics.

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