Regional Integration in Southern Africa: Comparative International Perspectives
Edited by Christopher Clapham, Greg Mills, Anna Morner & Elizabeth Sidiropoulos
SAIIA: 2001
ISBN: 1-919810-19-6
Pages: 239
Price: R70,00
Regional
integration is based on common assumptions abut political institutions
and frameworks. It is also generally accepted as a stepping stone to
wider global economic involvement and competitiveness. In Southern
Africa, SADC and Comesa are the vehicles for integrating states, all of which have different political and economic experiences.
This volume traces the process of Southern African integration in
Southern Africa is made difficult not only because of economic
differences, but also because of war. Contributors from Singapore,
Malawi, Britain and the Nordic countries, amongst others, examine these
issues as well as questions of conditionality, variable geometry and
how regional bodies relate to one another.
This book was published with the assistance of the Nordic Council of Ministers, the British High Commission in Pretoria and the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung.
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