Publisher: Langaa RPCIG, Cameroon
Pages: 430
Year: 2021
Category: Development Studies, Social Sciences
Dimensions: 229
Beyond the Dichotomy
In Africa, people striving to live and survive under the complex
relationship between development and subsistence have been directly or
indirectly feeling influences of globalisation. As Africa’s involvement
in globalisation deepens, social phenomena are apparently synchronizing
or becoming more similar to those in the rest of the world, but they are
not homogenised with them, especially those of developed countries now
or in the past. The dichotomic view distinguishing development and
subsistence has already become outdated. Day after day, African people
are trying to reconcile or bridge the two as capable actors. People in
Africa, faced with challenges common throughout the world, live in their
own ways. Africa can contribute to the world by sharing knowledge
acquired through the struggles of development and subsistence, and by
bridging the two.
Price range: £54.00 through £57.00
About the editors
Motoki Takahashi is Professor of Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies (ASAFAS) and Center for African Area Studies (CAAS) at Kyoto University, Japan
Shuichi Oyama is Professor of Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies (ASAFAS) and Center for African Area Studies (CAAS) at Kyoto University, Japan.
Herinjatovo Aimé Ramiarison is Professor of Economics and acting as General Coordinator of the University of Antananarivo, Madagascar.
Review
“Studies in development and subsistence in particular, and in African Studies in general, benefit from their detailed descriptions of peoples’ lives and their multidisciplinary character, but their tendency for analysis in dichotomous terms has limited the clarity and value of the literature. Recently, our understanding of various aspects of development and subsistence in sub-Saharan Africa and the relation between the two has been shifting substantially, away from the concept of mutual exclusiveness and towards the idea of complexity and interactiveness. The empirical evidence accumulated in this ‘African Potentials’ research adds additional nuances to such inherited dualism.”
Katsuhiko Kitagawa, Professor Emeritus, Kansai University, Japan
“In this exceptional study of the impact of globalisation on Africa’s political economy, the authors affirm post-colonial African economies are a fusion of development initiatives and local subsistence and informal economies. The volume constitutes a remarkable piece of scholarship, given its conceptualisation, scope of thematic coverage, and fascinating range of lived experiences and self-help efforts of the African economies.“
Kweku Ampiah Associate Professor, University of Leeds, UK