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Title Confrontation and liberation in southern africa : regional directions after the nkomati accord
Published LONDON : ROUTLEDGE, 2019

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Description 1 online resource
Series Westview special studies on Africa
Westview special studies on Africa
Contents Cover; Half Title; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables; About the Contributors; Introduction: Southern Africa Before and After Nkomati; PART 1. PRESENT STRUGGLES IN SOUTH AFRICA AND NAMIBIA; 1 Liberation Struggles in Southern Africa After Zimbabwe; 2 The Decolonization Process in Namibia; 3 Foreign Policy of Apartheid: From Settler Colonialism to State Capitalism and Neocolonial Corporatism; 4 The State of the Economies of Front Line States and the Liberation Struggle in Southern Africa; PART 2. IMPACT ON THE FRONT LINE STATES' FOREIGN POLICY AND DEFENSE POLICIES
5 The Nkomati Accord and Its Implications for the Front Line States and South Africa6 The Nkomati Agreement and the Future of the Second Phase of the National Liberation Struggles in Southern Africa; 7 Tanzania After the Nkomati Accord: Foreign Policy Restructuring in the Changing Strategic Balance in Southern Africa; PART 3. REGIONAL INTEGRATION: SADOC AND PTA; 8 Regional Economic Integration and the Liberation Struggle in Southern Africa; 9 The Implications of the Preferential Trade Area for Economic Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa; 10 SADCC in the Aftermath of the Nkomati Aocord
PART 4. LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS OF NKOMATI11 Marginal Notes on the Nkomati Accord: Unequal Treaties in International Law; 12 Peace and Security in Southern Africa: Legal Aspects; Conclusion: Total Strategy in Southern Africa -An Analysis of South African Regional Policy Since 1978; Appendixes; I Nkomati Accord, Signed Between Mozambique and South Africa, March 1984; II QAU and the Diplomacy of Decolonization; III Speech by Hon. V.M. Makhele, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Kingdom of Lesotho
Summary The 1984 "Nkomati Accord"--A bilateral security agreement between South Africa and Mozambique to eliminate guerrilla threats on both sides of a common border--was a milestone in regional confrontation and cooperation. Yet, the real challenge to the white South African regime is not external; it is internal opposition to apartheid. This volume, written by leading African scholars, begins by exploring the origins of racism and nationalism in Southern Africa. The contributors discuss the spread of nationalist movements throughout the region, arguing that South Africa has attempted to resist, divert, or undermine the domino effect by capitalizing on the Nkomati Accord. The authors focus on the legal aspects of the Accord, its impact on the foreign and defense policies of the Front Line States, prospects for regional development and economic integration, and potential outcomes of the national liberation struggles in Southern Africa
Notes Ibrahim S.R. Msablha. is Director of Studies ani ProgrĖƒ at the center for Foreign Relations in Tanzania as well as lecturer in interna.tionaJ. relations ani diplomacy at the University of Dar es Salaam. Dr. Msa.baha. holds a Ph. D. from Dalhousie University in Canada. Timothy H. Shaw is Professor of Political Science ani Director of the center for African Studies at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia
Subject Mozambique. Treaties, etc. South Africa, 1984 March 16.
SUBJECT Treaties, etc. (Mozambique and South Africa : 1984 March 16) fast
Subject National liberation movements -- Africa, Southern
Diplomatic relations
International economic relations
National liberation movements
SUBJECT Africa, Southern -- Foreign relations -- South Africa
South Africa -- Foreign relations -- Africa, Southern
Africa, Southern -- Foreign economic relations -- South Africa
South Africa -- Foreign economic relations -- Africa, Southern
Subject Southern Africa
South Africa
Form Electronic book
Author Msabaha, Ibrahim S. R
Shaw, Timothy M
ISBN 0429040555
9780429040559
9780429701764
0429701764
9780429721779
0429721773
9780429741784
0429741782