Implementing the new partnership for Africa's development (NEPAD) : challenges and prospects
Abstract
The study exammes the challenges and prospects of implementing the New Partnership for
Africa's Development in Africa. Relying on qualitative and quantitative research designs and
deploying key assumptions of dependency theory as framework, the research concludes that these
challenges are not only structural, endogenous and exogenous, but the ideological underpinnings
of the conceptualisation has rendered the implementation of NEP AD incomplete and unproductive.
The key finding of the research is that no single country can push for the full implementation of
NEP AD without the rest of the countries in Africa. This is part of the missing link, where support
for a continental plan like NEP AD has had to suffer failure. Besides, though paraded as a
partnership, the underlying philosophy is to perpetuate existing unequal relations between Africa
and the developed countries in view of Africa's post-coloniality. The study suggests that the
concept of African Renaissance, which conveys a deep desire for Africa's re-birth might be a
better way of approaching the development of the continent.
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