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基本説明
This book argues that French involvement in Africa is not in the interest of Africans.
Full Description
The role of French security policy and cooperation in Africa has long been recognized as a critically important factor in African politics and international relations. The newest form of security cooperation, a trend which merges security and development and which is actively promoted by other major Western powers, adds to our understanding of this broader trend in African relations with the industrialized North. This book investigates whether French involvement in Africa is really in the interest of Africans, or whether French intervention continues to deny African political freedom and to sustain their current social, economic and political conditions. It illustrates how policies portrayed as promoting stability and development can in fact be factors of instability and reproductive mechanisms of systems of dependency, domination and subordination. Providing complex ideas in a clear and pointed manner, France and the New Imperialism is a sophisticated understanding of critical security studies.
Contents
Chapter 1 French Security Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa; Chapter 2 The Symbolic State, Security, and Symbolic France; Chapter 3 Colonizing the Political in Africa: Underwriting French Hegemony and Proscribing Dissent; Chapter 4 Authorizing Hegemony: French Power and Military Cooperation, 1960-1994; Chapter 5 Into the Twenty-First Century: Liberal War, Global Governance, and French Military Cooperation; Chapter 6 Making (In)Security: The Use of Force to Master Violence; Chapter 7 Complicity in Genocide: France in Rwanda; Chapter 8 Hegemonic Struggles, Hegemonic Restructuring: France in Côte d'Ivoire; Chapter 9 Conclusion: France and the New Imperialism;