Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-2l2gl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-30T13:15:09.136Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

African Goals and Strategies Toward Southern Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Moses E. Akpan*
Affiliation:
South Carolina State College, Orangeburg, South Carolina

Extract

The African states, as they emerged into international politics, did so with certain well-defined common goals. These goals were shaped in large part by the experiences and ideologies of their independence movements. The achievement of most of these goals, particularly those which conflict with interests of other more powerful states, still remains a dream owing to the realities of the international political system which tend to place more powerful states in a better position to realize their goals than do the less powerful states. The African states, because of their lack of material power--economic and military in particular--have been forced to rely greatly upon the United Nations for the realization of their goals. It is possible that in the long run the moral force of the United Nations resolutions might accomplish what the African states are seeking, but so far they have had very little or no material effect. This African experience, at least for the short run, appears to confirm the theory that material power, economic and military in particular, determines in a large degree the extent to which states or group of states can achieve goals in international politics (Rosenau 1964, pp. 170-174, 334-349). States or group of states with relatively little power can realize their goals only if they accord with the interests of other more powerful states. This essay is an analysis of the goals of the African states toward Southern Africa and how the realization of these goals has been frustrated by the realities of the international political system.

Two primary goals are commonly shared by the African states with respect to Southern Africa. The first is the eradication from the area of colonial and settler rule in order for their fellow Africans, numbering about 30 million in the area, to achieve “national self-determination.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES CITED

Africa Report (August 1963).Google Scholar
Africa Today, Vol. XI (March 1964).Google Scholar
Akpan, Moses Ekpo. African Strategies in the United Nations (1960-1966). Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Southern Illinois University, 1969.Google Scholar
American Nego Leadership Conference on Africa. Minutes of the Meeting Held in Mayflower Hotel. Washington, D.C., January 1967.Google Scholar
Brykin, V.Africa and the United Nations.” International Affairs, Vol. VIII (August 1965).Google Scholar
Cervenka, Zdenek. The Organization of African Unity. New York: Praeger, 1970.Google Scholar
Cooper, John Sherman. Statement to the Twenty-Third Session of the United Nations General Assembly in the Special Political Committee on Policies of the Government of the Republic of South Africa. November 8, 1968.Google Scholar
du Plessis, C. W.Highway to Racial Harmony.” First Paper 69. Supplement to the Digest of South Africa (Pretoria), March 1959.Google Scholar
Emerson, Rupert. From Empire to Nation. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1962.Google Scholar
First Conference of Independent African States (FCIAS). Resolution on the Future of Dependent Territories in Africa. Accra, 1958a.Google Scholar
First Conference of Independent African States (FCIAS). Resolution on Eradication of Colonial Rule from Africa. Accra, 1958b.Google Scholar
Holsti, K. J. International Politics. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, 1907.Google Scholar
International Court of Justice (ICJ). Reports (December 21, 1962; July 18, 1966).Google Scholar
Kimble, George. Tropical Africa: Society and People II. Baltimore: Lora Baltimore, 1960.Google Scholar
Legum, Colin and Drysdale, John. African Contemporary Record (1968-1969). London: Africa Research Limited, 1969.Google Scholar
Leiss, Amelia, ed. Apartheid in the United Nations. New York: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1965.Google Scholar
Louw, Eric. Statement Before the General Assembly of the United Nations. GAOR, 15th Session, A/PU 1033, October 11, 1960.Google Scholar
Manifesto, Lusaka. Adopted at the 5th Summit Conference of the East and Central African States. Lusaka, Zambia, April 14-16, 1969.Google Scholar
McGellan, G. South Africa. New York: Praeger, 1963.Google Scholar
Marcum, John. “The Angola Rebellion: Status Report.” Africa Report, Vol. IX (February 1964).Google Scholar
Mboya, Tom. Freedom and After. Boston: Little, Brown, 1963.Google Scholar
Mondlane, Edwardo C.Race Relations and Portuguese Colonial Policy with Special Reference to Mozambique.” Objective Justice, Vol. I (1969).Google Scholar
New York Times (December 11, 1964).Google Scholar
Organization of African Unity. Permanent Secretariat of the OAU at the U.N. Resolutions Adopted by the Second Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government, held in Accra, Ghana, October 21-25, 1965.Google Scholar
Organization of African Unity. Provisional Secretariat of the OAU. Basic Documents and Resolutions. Addis Ababa: Commercial Press, 1964.Google Scholar
Rosenau, James, ed. International Politics and Foreign Policy. New York: Free Press, 1964.Google Scholar
South African Reserve Bank. Supplement to Quarterly Bulletin Statistics (December 1963).Google Scholar
Sunday Advocate (Baton Rouge), November 17, 1968.Google Scholar
United Nations General Assembly Official Records. 17th Session, No. 17 (A/52170).Google Scholar
United Nations General Assembly Official Records. 18th Session, Supplement A/6006.Google Scholar
United Nations Monthly Chronicle, Vol. III (June 1966); Vol. VI (April 1969).Google Scholar
United Nations Public Information: Apartheid in South Africa I. New York: U.N., 1964.Google Scholar
United Nations Review, No. 6 (May 1960).Google Scholar
United Nations Security Council Official Records. 18th Year, S/PU1069. September 13, 1963.Google Scholar
United Nations Security Council Official Records. 18th Year, S/PU1056. August 1963.Google Scholar
United Nations Security Council Official Records. Supplement for April to June 1964, Document S/5674.Google Scholar
United States Department of State. Statement by Assistant Secretary of State G. Mennen Williams to the Sub-Committee on Africa of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Washington, D.C., March 1, 1966.Google Scholar
United States Mission to the United Nations. Press Release USUN-5, Corr. 2. January 27, 1967.Google Scholar
West Africa (October 1968).Google Scholar
Young, Kenneth. Rhodesia and Independence. New York: Heinemann, 1967.Google Scholar