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Britain in Africa

Britain in Africa

Tom Porteous

Buy Now Hardback: £40.00 ISBN: 9781842779750
Buy Now Paperback: £12.99 ISBN: 9781842779767

Publication date: 15/04/2008
Features:
Format: 198mm x 126mm
Series Title: African Arguments

About the Book

Why has Africa become such an important priority for Britain's foreign policy under New Labour? What interests and values is the UK seeking to uphold by intervening? Why has aid to Africa more than tripled over the past decade? How has the UK's involvement in the War on Terror affected its efforts there?

In Britain in Africa Tom Porteous seeks to answer these and other questions about Britain's role in Africa since 1997. He provides an account of the key players, the policies they constructed in the shadow of the war in Iraq and the future of Britain's engagement with the continent. This book sets out the balance sheet of what Britain has achieved, and where and why it failed in Africa.

A compelling read, whose importance for international politics reaches far beyond Britain or Africa.

Read Tom Porteous in The Guardian here

Commendations

'This is the most helpful and illuminating book on a Western country's foreign policy in Africa for a very long time. Porteous takes us behind the scenes into the policy world itself. Rarely have such intricacies been conveyed so compellingly.' - Jane Guyer, Johns Hopkins University

'A lucid, hugely informative and insightful account of British policy towards Africa under Blair. It should be required reading for today's Ministers and their advisers.' - David Mepham, Director of Policy, Save the Children

'Tom Porteous provides an unusually rounded balance-sheet, crisp and without pomp, of the results of Britain’s rather overweening policies towards Africa during the Blair years. If the risks of deterioration in the life-chances of most Africans are to be reduced, political and developmental strategy must, he argues, be better informed, less fashion-prone, and less blinkered by a naïvely conceived counter-terrorism. Seldom does one read such a rounded analysis of these complex interrelated issues.' Jonathan Benthall, University College London

'A succinct and very useful overview of some of the highs and lows of Britain’s Africa policies under the Labour government.'- Paul D. Williams, Elliot School of International Affairs, George Washington University

Contents

Acknowledgements
Glossary
Introduction
1. The Players
2. The Policy
3. Limits of Leverage
4. Futures
Notes
Suggested Further Reading

About the Author

Tom Porteous has worked and travelled extensively in Africa as a journalist, UN peacekeeping official and for the Foriegn Office. In the 1980s and early 1990s he was a freelance correspondent for the Guardian, the BBC and others, first in Cairo and later in Berlin and Morocco. In 1994 and 1995 he worked in UN peace operations in Somalia and Liberia. From 1995 to 2000 he was a programme producer, presenter and editor at the BBC World Service radio working on Africa and the Middle East. From 2001 to 2003 he was the conflict management adviser at the Africa directorate of the British Foreign Office. He is currently the London Director of Human Rights Watch.