Toward Peace and Security in Southern Africa

Front Cover
Harvey Glickman
Taylor & Francis, 1990 - Political Science - 259 pages
First Published in 1990.This volume originates with a conference at Haverford College, April 28-30, 1989. On that weekend an international group of scholars, inside and outside governments, from Africa and elsewhere, assembled to address the theme, "Toward Peace and Security in Southern Africa." The conference was based on a sense of urgency concerning the continuing plight of the region -- reflected in the renewed state of emergency in South Africa and the declining economies in southern Africa - as well as, paradoxically, a sense of impending opportunity for South Africa and the region, as manifested in the Angola-Namibia accords recently negotiated.
 

Contents

A Comparative View of South Africa as Fragment Culture
3
A South African Fragment Culture? A Comment
25
Routes to Peace?
33
Joe Thloloe
53
Carrots as Well as Sticks in Demilitarizing Southern
73
Moeletsi Mbeki
109
U N Efforts in International CoOperation toward
123
The Front Line States Regional Interstate Relations
131
The SADCC and the Front Line States Viewing their
163
Reflections on Relative Independence
171
Southern Africa and American Politics
205
What Role for the U S in Resolving Conflict
225
Steps Toward a More Effective U S Foreign Policy
237
Index
251
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Harvey Glickman Haverford College

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