The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture

Leadership and political systems in most of Africa have been described in several negative ways. Paternalism, clientelism, dictatorship, corruption and such pejorative labels have been used to described the type of politics prevalent in most of Africa today. A number of studies have explained Africa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kenneth Kalu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2020-12-01
Series:Vestnik RUDN. International Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23319/18031
_version_ 1797936926017191936
author Kenneth Kalu
author_facet Kenneth Kalu
author_sort Kenneth Kalu
collection DOAJ
description Leadership and political systems in most of Africa have been described in several negative ways. Paternalism, clientelism, dictatorship, corruption and such pejorative labels have been used to described the type of politics prevalent in most of Africa today. A number of studies have explained Africa’s political challenges in the context of the choices of postcolonial African leaders. Others have pointed to European colonial exploitation and its destructive legacies as the foundations of the perverse political culture that define contemporary Africa. While these factors play important roles in defining the type of politics that has endured in the continent during the past half century, this paper takes a look at another epoch that had significant impacts on Africa’s political culture. The paper argues that the foreign policies of the United States and USSR - two major actors in Africa during the Cold War - had some of the most significant impacts on the political culture that evolved in postcolonial Africa. In pursuit of ideological supremacy, these foreign actors focused on undermining each other, with little consideration on how their actions in Africa were shaping the continent’s political development. By providing military support to opposing forces in African countries, the Cold War actors institutionalized a violent political culture in postcolonial Africa.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T18:36:51Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e40a4a4997924345878e74123aa85c42
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2313-0660
2313-0679
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T18:36:51Z
publishDate 2020-12-01
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
record_format Article
series Vestnik RUDN. International Relations
spelling doaj.art-e40a4a4997924345878e74123aa85c422023-02-02T01:03:31ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Vestnik RUDN. International Relations2313-06602313-06792020-12-01201112110.22363/2313-0660-2020-20-1-11-2118706The Cold War and Africa’s Political CultureKenneth Kalu0Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson UniversityLeadership and political systems in most of Africa have been described in several negative ways. Paternalism, clientelism, dictatorship, corruption and such pejorative labels have been used to described the type of politics prevalent in most of Africa today. A number of studies have explained Africa’s political challenges in the context of the choices of postcolonial African leaders. Others have pointed to European colonial exploitation and its destructive legacies as the foundations of the perverse political culture that define contemporary Africa. While these factors play important roles in defining the type of politics that has endured in the continent during the past half century, this paper takes a look at another epoch that had significant impacts on Africa’s political culture. The paper argues that the foreign policies of the United States and USSR - two major actors in Africa during the Cold War - had some of the most significant impacts on the political culture that evolved in postcolonial Africa. In pursuit of ideological supremacy, these foreign actors focused on undermining each other, with little consideration on how their actions in Africa were shaping the continent’s political development. By providing military support to opposing forces in African countries, the Cold War actors institutionalized a violent political culture in postcolonial Africa.http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23319/18031africacold warcolonialismusaussrforeign policypolitics
spellingShingle Kenneth Kalu
The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
Vestnik RUDN. International Relations
africa
cold war
colonialism
usa
ussr
foreign policy
politics
title The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
title_full The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
title_fullStr The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
title_full_unstemmed The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
title_short The Cold War and Africa’s Political Culture
title_sort cold war and africa s political culture
topic africa
cold war
colonialism
usa
ussr
foreign policy
politics
url http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23319/18031
work_keys_str_mv AT kennethkalu thecoldwarandafricaspoliticalculture
AT kennethkalu coldwarandafricaspoliticalculture