FANON'S WARNING: A CIVIL SOCIETY READER ON THE NEW PARTNERSHIP FOR AFRICA'S DEVELOPMENT
Is the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) a genuine blueprint for Africa's recovery? The question arises not least because some things don't add up. NEPAD argues that if Africa's "enormous potential and human resources are properly harnessed and utilized, it could lead to equitable and sustainable growth of the continent as well as enhance its rapid integration into the world economy." As many of the contributions in this reader show, the evidence thus far is that "equitable and sustainable growth" and Africa's "rapid integration into the world economy are increasingly counterposed.
Allegedly voicing the popular will, NEPADs authors present NEPAD as Africa's "partnership" with world leaders. The partners that they would woo are the same leaders who preach to Africa about the virtues of free trade while preserving the enormous protections they give to their industrial and agricultural corporations, in open contempt of the WTO, which is supposed to regulate and enforce fair play. Skepticism about corporate-driven globalization is a thread running through the first round of civil society critiques of NEPAD. This book reproduces commentary from major social movements, trade unions, progressive intellectuals and other community leaders. It also includes the original NEPAD and a paragraph-by-paragraph annotated critique.