ABSTRACT

Paul Collier’s contributions to development economics,and in regard to Africa in particular, have marked him out as one of the most influential commentators of recent times. His research has centred upon the causes and consequences of civil war, the effects of aid, and the problems of democracy in low-income and natural-resource-rich societies. His work has also enjoyed substantial policy impact, having seen him sit as a senior adviser to Tony Blair’s Commission on Africa and addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations

This collection of Collier’s major writings, with assistance from Anke Hoeffler and Jan Gunning, and accompanied by a new introduction, provide the definitive account of a wide range of macroeconomic, microeconomic and political economy topics concerned with Africa. Within macroeconomics, there is a focus on external shocks, exchange rate and trade policies, whilst microeconomic topics focus upon labour and financial markets, as well as rural development. Collier’s book The Bottom Billion had become a landmark book and this summation of the research underpinning it will be a superb guide for all those concerned with African development.

part I|210 pages

Violent conflict

chapter 1|32 pages

Greed and grievance in civil war

chapter 2|28 pages

Beyond greed and grievance

Feasibility and civil war

chapter 4|17 pages

Post-conflict risks

(in collaboration with the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations and the World Bank)

chapter 8|11 pages

On economic causes of civil war

chapter 9|27 pages

Unintended consequences

Does aid promote arms races?

part II|88 pages

The political economy of democracy

chapter 11|30 pages

Testing the neocon agenda

Democracy in resource-rich societies

part III|84 pages

Aid and trade

chapter 13|25 pages

Aid allocation and poverty reduction

chapter 14|13 pages

The complementarities of poverty reduction, equity, and growth

A perspective on the World Development Report 2006

chapter 16|19 pages

Rethinking trade preferences

How Africa can diversify its exports