The Political Economy of Development in AfricaThe Political Economy of Development in Africa
A joint statement from five research programmes, May 2012.
On behalf of :
Africa Power and Politics Programme
The Developmental Leadership Program
Elites, Production and Poverty : A Comparative Analysis
Political Economy of Agricultural Policy in Africa
Tracking Development
Mapping Digital Media : South Africa
The Global Information Technology Report 2012, Living in a Hyperconnected WorldThe Global Information Technology Report 2012 is a special project within the framework of the World Economic Forum’s Centre for Global Competitiveness and Performance and the Industry Partnership Programme for Information Technology and Telecommunications Industries. It is the result of a collaboration between the World Economic Forum and INSEAD. ISBN-10 : 92-95044-33-9, ISBN-13 : 978-92-95044-33-3, 441 pages.
E-governance and Citizen Participation in West Africa : Challenges and OpportunitiesUne publication conjointe de L'Institut Panos Afrique de l'Ouest et du Programme des Nations Unies pour le développement.
Rapport de la quatrième réunion annuelle conjointe de la Conférence des ministres de l’économie et des finances de l’UA et de la Conférence des ministres africains des finances, de la planification et du développement économique de la CEARapport de la quatrième réunion annuelle conjointe de la Conférence des ministres de l’économie et des finances de l’UA et de la Conférence des ministres africains des finances, de la planification et du développement économique de la CEA
Addressing Côte d’Ivoire’s Deeper CrisisÉcrit par Thierno Mouctar Bah , du Centre d’études stratégiques de l’Afrique, Mars 2012.
Women and Security Governance in AfricaEdités par Funmi Olonisakin et Awino Okech, Pambazuka Press, 2011, ISBN-13 : 9781906387891, 172pgs.
Demystifying AidEcrit par Yash Tandon, publié par Pambazuka Press, Novembre 2011, ISBN-13 : 9780857490902, 40pgs
The Politics of Resources Extraction : Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations, and the StateTerence Gomez et Suzana Sawyer, Palgrave, 978-0-230-34772-4, 336 pgs
A new book released by the South African Institute of International Affairs and published by Jacana Media examines the governance success stories of a number of African states. Entitled « African Solutions : Best Practices from the African Peer Review Mechanism », the book is the outcome of research into the policies, programmes and experiences identified as « best practices » from the first 12 countries that published Country Review Reports (CRRs) under the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM). These countries are Algeria, Benin, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Mali, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa and Uganda. The APRM was conceived as a voluntary mechanism and, in the absence of ’hard pressure’ for compliance, incentives - rather than sanctions - could be the way to strengthen governance on the continent.
Thus, « best practices » are important as potential models for reform, and to counterbalance the temptation to concentrate on what is not working in Africa. In this book, the best practices identified in the CRRs are examined critically and methodically with a view to understanding :
• How « best practices » are conceptualised within the APRM (including how they are intended to be used to achieve the desired results) ;
• Whether the reported practices qualify as « best practices » by being demonstrably better than the rest, replicable and addressing APRM goals,
• How these practices could be strengthened to be used as material for peer learning within the APRM and across the continent.
Download Chapter 1 of Africa Solutions : Best Practices from the African Peer Review Mechanism
To purchase this book please contact SAIIA’s Publications Department or Jacana Media
