Africa: A Continent Exiting and Entering a Century in a ‘Sick-Bay’
Date
1999
Authors
Mataze, Owa Nduhukhire
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Uganda Martyrs University
Abstract
The paper appears in three parts, which must be read as one. Part One situates the current
development crisis in Africa in the relevant theoretical and historical context. It also highlights the
global context of the crisis and the extent it has hindered genuine human-centred development in the
continent to date. Part Two examines the ideological assumptions that underlie and sustain the
development crisis. These are the myths and deceptions on and about Africa, its natural and human
resources and the reproduction of these distorted images. The relationship between the ideologies and
the anti-social and anti-environmental growth patterns is examined. Part Three examines current
philosophies and practices that are increasingly pushing Africa into the fangs of global capitalism on
the basis of an intensified `sponsored-peripheral capitalism'. Finally, suggestions as to how the
continent can enjoy the twenty-first century outside the `sick-bay' of `mal-development' are made. A
select bibliography is included at the end of each part.
Description
Keywords
Africa, development