1st Edition

The World Bank and Africa The Construction of Governance States

By Graham Harrison Copyright 2004
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    Shortlisted for the Inaugural International Political Economy Group annual book prize, 2006.

    An incisive exploration of the interventions of the World Bank in severely indebted African states. Understanding sovereignty as a frontier rather than a boundary, this key study develops a vision of a powerful international organization reconciling a global political economy with its own designs and a specific set of challenges posed by the African region. This analysis details the nature of the World Bank intervention in the sovereign frontier, investigating institutional development, discursive intervention, and political stabilization. It tackles the methods by which the World Bank has led a project to re-shape certain African states according to a governance template, leading to the presentation of 'success stories' in a continent associated with reform failure.

    This conceptually innovative book details a political economy of the World Bank in Africa that is both globally contextualized and attentive to individual states. It is the only volume to look at the bank's relations with Africa and will interest all students and researchers of African politics and the World Bank.

    Section I. the Governance Encounter: The World Bank, Governance States and a New Sovereign Frontier
    Chapter 1: The Road to Governance: The World Bank and Africa
    Chapter 2: Governance States in Africa: Conceptualising the Encounter between the World Bank and the Sovereign Frontier
    Chapter 3. Conceptualising the World Bank: Governance and Global RĂ©gimes
    Section II. Constructing Governance States: Institutions, Discourse, Security
    Chapter 4: Introducing Post Conditionality
    Chapter 5: The Mechanics of Post Conditionality
    Chapter 6: Liberalism and the Discourse of Reform in Governance States
    Chapter 7: Securing Governance States
    Chapter 8: Neoliberalism's Revenge

    Biography

    Graham Harrison lectures politics at the University of Sheffield, UK. He is an editor of New Political Economy and Review of African Political Economy, and is currently working on the concept of empire in international relations, and administrative reform in Tanzania.

    'Graham Harrison's The World Bank and Africa is an important contribution to this debate that situates recent interventions in the by the World Bank in Sub-Saharan Africa within a more diverse context of regional government structures.'- Adam David Morton, Modern African Studies

    'Graham Harrison's analysis of governance states in Africa - linked to the shaping of a new terrain of intervention by the World Bank - is a winner.'- Adam David Morton, Modern African Studies

    'The World Bank and Africa should be required reading across the study of political economy, development, post-colonial African studies, and historical sociology.'- Adam David Morton, Modern African Studies