Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa

The struggle against colonialism and the attainment of independence in Africa raised hopes that Africa would industrialise and develop a long side other parts of the global community. This has however not come to pass as most parts of the Global North are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution Era whil...

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Egile nagusia: Munemo, Douglas
Formatua: Artikulua
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua: UUM Press 2019
Gaiak:
Sarrera elektronikoa:https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/29795/1/JGD%2015%2002%202019%2015-33.pdf
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author Munemo, Douglas
author_facet Munemo, Douglas
author_sort Munemo, Douglas
collection UUM
description The struggle against colonialism and the attainment of independence in Africa raised hopes that Africa would industrialise and develop a long side other parts of the global community. This has however not come to pass as most parts of the Global North are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution Era while Africa remains mired in violent conflict, poverty, ethnicity, dictatorship and corruption that are retarding peace, security and development despite the fall of for malempire. This paper examines the dilemma of peace and security in Africa. Many conflict theorists and peace builders in the South advance neo-colonialism, neo-liberalism and globalization as sources of conflict and factors blocking peace on the African continent. The paper, apply a qualitative study employing decolonial analysis and drawing data from relevant documents argues that the continuation of colonial patterns of domination in the realms of power, knowledge and being in spite of the end of juridical – political domination is the raison d’etre for the seemingly unending conflicts that have engulfed the African continent to the detriment of peace and development. The paper reveals how coloniality has produced a ‘postcolonial’ leadership that has continued to practice politics in a violent, repressive, corrupt and unaccountable manner informed by colonial logic that breeds inimical practices such as racism, tribalism, regionalism and patriarchy. Finally, the paper advocates for decoloniality for peace and development to be achieved in Africa.
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spelling uum-297952023-09-27T14:29:45Z https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/29795/ Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa Munemo, Douglas JZ International relations The struggle against colonialism and the attainment of independence in Africa raised hopes that Africa would industrialise and develop a long side other parts of the global community. This has however not come to pass as most parts of the Global North are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution Era while Africa remains mired in violent conflict, poverty, ethnicity, dictatorship and corruption that are retarding peace, security and development despite the fall of for malempire. This paper examines the dilemma of peace and security in Africa. Many conflict theorists and peace builders in the South advance neo-colonialism, neo-liberalism and globalization as sources of conflict and factors blocking peace on the African continent. The paper, apply a qualitative study employing decolonial analysis and drawing data from relevant documents argues that the continuation of colonial patterns of domination in the realms of power, knowledge and being in spite of the end of juridical – political domination is the raison d’etre for the seemingly unending conflicts that have engulfed the African continent to the detriment of peace and development. The paper reveals how coloniality has produced a ‘postcolonial’ leadership that has continued to practice politics in a violent, repressive, corrupt and unaccountable manner informed by colonial logic that breeds inimical practices such as racism, tribalism, regionalism and patriarchy. Finally, the paper advocates for decoloniality for peace and development to be achieved in Africa. UUM Press 2019 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc4_by https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/29795/1/JGD%2015%2002%202019%2015-33.pdf Munemo, Douglas (2019) Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa. Journal of Governance and Development (JGD), 15 (2). pp. 15-33. ISSN 2289-4756 https://e-journal.uum.edu.my/index.php/jgd/article/view/13286
spellingShingle JZ International relations
Munemo, Douglas
Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title_full Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title_fullStr Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title_short Coloniality, the Bane of Peace and Development in Africa
title_sort coloniality the bane of peace and development in africa
topic JZ International relations
url https://repo.uum.edu.my/id/eprint/29795/1/JGD%2015%2002%202019%2015-33.pdf
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