Development and Peace in Africa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4314/ajia.v8i1-2.57236Keywords:
Development and Peace in Africa, post-colonial AfricaAbstract
Development is not often regarded as a function of peace in both development
theory and development discourse. In the context of post-colonial Africa, both
internal security and external security should be crucial considerations in the
pursuit of development alternatives. The reason for considering development
and security is that part of Africa’s development impasse can be attributed to
internal political terror since the Cold War. While development theory and
discourse from modernisation theory to global neo-liberalism have dominated
‘development’ strategies in Africa and produced an Africa bereft of development,
political terror has systematically undermined both development and
security. Political terror, as sponsored by foreign forces and signified by collateral
damage, not only produced extensive fear and destabilisation, it hit at the
very core of development – human resources, political establishments and economic
order. The end of the Cold War has not seen an end to political terror in
Africa, but it has features that need to be considered for Africa’s development
alternatives. Some of the features are the reduction in Africa’s foreign aid, disarmament,
and the re-invention of the philosophical foundations of the state
in Africa. This calls for a transition from a military state towards a developmental
state with citizens participating to curb internal conflict and face the external
challenges of the new post-Cold War global system.