1st Edition

Toward Peace Security Southern

By Harvey Glickman Copyright 1990

    First Published in 1990.This volume originates with a conference at Haverford College, April 28-30, 1989. On that weekend an international group of scholars, inside and outside governments, from Africa and elsewhere, assembled to address the theme, "Toward Peace and Security in Southern Africa." The conference was based on a sense of urgency concerning the continuing plight of the region -- reflected in the renewed state of emergency in South Africa and the declining economies in southern Africa - as well as, paradoxically, a sense of impending opportunity for South Africa and the region, as manifested in the Angola-Namibia accords recently negotiated.

    Part One: The South African Cockpit 1. A Comparative View of South Africa as Fragment Culture, A South African "Fragment Culture"? A Comment 2. The Dynamics of Conflict in South Africa: Routes to Peace? The Intensifying Armed Struggle: A Comment 3. Some Thoughts on the Demilitarization of South and Southern Africa Carrots as Well as Sticks in Demilitarizing Southern Africa: A Comment 4. Majority Rule in South Africa: The Role of Global Pressure Popular Support for Armed Struggle: A Comment 5. The Future of South Africa: Possibilities and Impossibilities Part Two: International and Regional Pressures 6. U.N. Efforts in International Co-Operation toward Political Change in Southern Africa 7. The Front Line States, Regional Interstate Relations and Institution Building in Southern Africa, The SADCC and the Front Line States; Viewing their Performance: A Comment 8. Namibia: Reflections on Relative Independence Part Three: The US A and Southern Africa 9. Reconstructionist Strategies in Mozambique: How Insecurity and De-Development in Mozambique Provide an Opportunity for U.S.-U.S.S.R. Co-Operative Action toward Stability and Peaceful Change in Southern Africa 10. Southern Africa and American Politics 11. Constructive Engagement at Work in Southern Africa: A View from the Inside 12. What Role for the U.S. in Resolving Conflict in Southern Africa? Steps Toward a More Effective U.S. Foreign Policy in Southern Africa: A Comment, 13. In Conclusion: Charting a Path toward Peace and Security in Southern Africa

    Biography

    Harvey Glickman Haverford College