ABSTRACT

A fundamental question about contemporary Africa is why does Africa remain so poor, long after the departure of the European Colonial domination and in the midst of so many natural resources?

Poverty Reduction Strategies in Africa provides new understandings of the persistent issue of poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa and makes recommendations for policy frameworks to help African governments alleviate poverty. Each chapters uses case studies to review the old strategies for resolving the problem of poverty in the continent and make the case for new initiatives to address poverty. The contributors focus on practical and day-to-day issues as the best approach to formulate and implement poverty reduction strategies in contemporary Africa.

This book is invaluable reading for students and scholars of African politics and development.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|118 pages

Dimensions and assessments of poverty reduction policies and programs in sub-Saharan Africa

chapter 1|31 pages

Poverty in postcolonial Africa

The legacy of contested perspectives

chapter 5|17 pages

PEPFAR and preventing HIV/AIDS transmission

Evidence from sub-Saharan Africa

part II|105 pages

Problems of good governance and institutional failures in West Africa

chapter 9|22 pages

In the web of neoliberalism and deepening contradictions?

Assessing poverty reform strategies in West Africa since the mid-1980s

chapter 12|11 pages

An appraisal of the poverty reduction program in Bayelsa State of Nigeria

“In Care of the People” (COPE)

part III|51 pages

Dimensions of poverty in East and Southern Africa

chapter 14|23 pages

Land reforms, landlessness, and poverty in Kenya

The postcolonial experience

chapter 15|15 pages

Extraversion and development in northwestern Ethiopia

The case of the Humera Agricultural Project, 1967 to 1975