ABSTRACT

This book examines Africa’s internal and external relations by focusing on three core concepts: orders, diplomacy and borderlands.

The contributors examine traditional and non-traditional diplomatic actors, and domestic, regional, continental, and global orders. They argue that African diplomats profoundly shape these orders by situating themselves within in-between-spaces of geographical and functional orders. It is in these borderlands that agency, despite all kinds of constraints, flourishes. Chapters in the book compare domestic orders to regional ones, and then continental African orders to global ones. They deal with a range of functional orders, including development, international trade, human rights, migration, nuclear arms control, peacekeeping, public administration, and territorial change. By focusing on these topics, the volume contributes to a better understanding of African international relations, sharpens analyses of ordering processes in world politics, and adds to our comprehension of how diplomacy shapes orders and vice versa. The studies collected here show a much more nuanced picture of African agency in African and international affairs and suggest that African diplomacy is far more extensive than is often assumed.

This book will be of much interest to students of diplomacy studies, African politics and International Relations.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Orders, borderlands and diplomacy – African actors in world politics

chapter 1|24 pages

Where local and global orders interface

An analysis of how civil society actors contextualise human rights norms in South Africa 1

chapter 2|25 pages

Human rights in South Africa’s identity

The interplay of international and domestic mechanisms in South Africa’s identity in global politics

chapter 3|19 pages

Zaire’s exile–diplomats

African agency in overlapping orders

chapter 4|21 pages

The borderlands of order in the borderlands of Africa

Katanga and the Caprivi Strip

chapter 6|23 pages

The ECOWAS Commission and the making of regional order in West Africa

Intersecting logics in international public administration 1

chapter 7|20 pages

Overlaps and distinctiveness

Africa’s nuclear order

chapter 9|18 pages

Non-impunity, the International Criminal Court and the African Union

Exploring the borderland of the international orders related to non-impunity

chapter 10|23 pages

Stirring the pot

The African Union and the international order