Hostname: page-component-76dd75c94c-lntk7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T08:58:50.110Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Context of African Political Thought

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The political ideas put forward by the leaders of the new states provide one of the most popular entrées to African politics, and they have now received a good deal of attention. This is understandable enough. Many African leaders are highly articulate, and their views, embodied in frequent speeches and writings by those who control the information media, are—unlike so much other information—easily accessible. The value and significance of these ideas may well have been exaggerated, but even so they cannot simply be ignored.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970

References

Page 2 note 1 E.g. Sigmund, Paul E., The Ideologies of the Developing Nations (New York and London, 1963)Google Scholar, and Wallerstein, I., ‘The Political Ideology of the P.D.G.’, in Présence africaine (Paris), XII, p. 40, 1962Google Scholar. See Zolberg, Aristide, Creating Political Order (Chicago, 1966), p. 39Google Scholar, for the psychological, social, and cultural need for such maps.

Page 3 note 1 For example, by Finer, S. E., ‘The One-party Régimes in Africa: reconsiderations’, in Government and Opposition (London), II, 4, 07 1967, pp. 494–7.Google Scholar

Page 3 note 2 See Arrighi, Giovanni and Saul, John, ‘Socialism and Economic Development in Tropical Africa,’ in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), VI, 2, 08 1968, especially pp. 146–7 and 156–61.Google Scholar

Page 3 note 3 Finer, op. cit. pp. 492–4.

Page 3 note 4 There is a large literature, for example, on whether the ‘democratic one-party states’ are democratic in any useful sense of the word.

Page 3 note 5 See Zolberg, op. cit. p. 59, and Saul, John, ‘Africa’, in Ionescu, Ghita and Gellner, Ernest (eds.), Populism (London, 1969), especially pp. 141–5.Google Scholar

Page 4 note 1 Zolberg, op. cit. ch. 2; this approach, at any rate, is implicit in much of Zolberg's discussion, though a formal definition is lacking.

Page 4 note 2 On which, let me hasten to add, many of Zolberg's views seem to me admirable.

Page 4 note 3 Zolberg, op. cit. pp. 53–4.

Page 4 note 4 Even in the ‘ideological’ one-party states, the ideology generally has to be assembled by its investigator from several speeches or papers, few of which are systematically arranged; see, for example, Wallerstein, loc. cit., or Snyder, Francis G., ‘The Political Thought of Modibo Keita’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies, v, 1, 1967.Google Scholar

Page 5 note 1 Zolberg, op. cit. p. 60.

Page 5 note 2 Snyder, loc. cit.

Page 5 note 3 I have myself written a paper under this title, closely comparing Nyerere and Rousseau; in retrospect, I cannot help being rather relieved that it was never published.

Page 6 note 1 It would be instructive to see how many elements in the single-party ideology could be matched from the ideology of Harold Wilson. Hard work and unity behind the government in pursuit of national goals are certainly there (‘it means putting Britain first’); so are the conspiratorial view of opposition (‘this tightly knit group of politically motivated men’) and the fervent belief in the value of economic development (‘the white heat of the technological revolution’). Threats directed at irresponsible sub-groups such as the trade unions are also familiar, and there are even occasional hints of an appeal to the classless society.

Page 6 note 2 Chilcote, Ronald A., ‘The Political Thought of Amilcar Cabral’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies, VI, 3, 10 1968.Google Scholar

Page 7 note 1 Ibid. p. 381; it is not clear from the context whether it is Cabral or Chilcote who believes that these rights are to be found in the U.N. Charter.

Page 7 note 2 Ibid. p. 383.

Page 7 note 3 See Saul, op. cit. and Arrighi and Saul, loc. cit.

Page 8 note 1 As Saul makes clear, op. cit. p. 146.

Page 8 note 2 This seems to be the basis, for example, of Duffy, James and Manners, Robert A., Africa Speaks (Princeton, 1961).Google Scholar

Page 8 note 3 Not the only one: corruption and force are others; but words are cheap.

Page 9 note 1 This point has been recognised since the first studies of this subject, as in Hodgkin, Thomas, ‘A Note on the Language of African Nationalism’, in Kirkwood, Kenneth (ed.), St Antony's Papers Number 10 (London, 1961).Google Scholar

Page 9 note 2 Charter of the Pan African Freedom Movement for East and Central Africa, as quoted by Hodgkin, ibid. p. 26.

Page 10 note 1 As Saul, loc. cit. pp. 141–3, belabours Worsley for doing.

Page 10 note 2 As Finer does, loc. cit. pp. 494–9.

Page 11 note 1 At a C.P.P. rally in Accra, June 1955, quoted from Austin, Dennis, Politics in Ghana (London, 1964), p. 31 n.Google Scholar

Page 12 note 1 From the text advertised in The Times (London), 22 05 1969, by the Zambia High Commission.Google Scholar

Page 13 note 1 The Times, 27 March and 14 January 1967.

Page 13 note 2 See Le Monde (Paris), 28 12 1965.Google Scholar