My blogging colleague Lisa Gambone has been doing fine work over at the FPA War Crimes Blog where African affairs cross her transom quite regularly. Please check out her work.
Archives for Foreign Policy Association
War Crimes and Africa
At the FPA Global Film Review Blog
All of my colleagues at the various Foreign Policy Association Blogs are doing wonderful work and I hope that you are reading all of them regularly even if your main interests lie in African affairs. (And I want to thank you if your interests lie elsewhere but you came over here anyway.)
In recent weeks Sean Murphy at the FPA Global Film Review Blog has written a number of posts, with video links (as you’ve probably noticed, I am fairly bells and whistles free here at the Africa Blog — something I am going to try to rectify) pertaining to Africa. You should check out his work on The Battle of Algiers (1966), General Idi Amin Dada (1974), Ghosts of Rwanda (2004), The Devil Came on Horseback (2007), and Darfur Now* (2007). Please check out these fine, concise reviews and some of the video footage provided.
*I am wary of some of the shallow activism embodied in Darfur Now, which has its heart in the right place and time, but which, like so much about Darfur, tends to simplify it all into self-righteous can-do-ism, or what Texas in Africa calls “badvocacy.”
Change We Can Believe In
In an exciting change, the Foreign Policy Association is combining the South Africa Blog with this Africa Blog, which will be the new permanent site of FPA Africa commentary. I will continue to post on South African issues, but this transition will be better for me, as keeping both blogs has not always been easy, it will be more convenient for readers, and will serve the FPA best. Basically everybody wins. Shortly those who attempt to access the South Africa Blog will be redirected here. Thanks for your continued support.
Announcement: The FPA Africa Blog
In order to rationalize and expand upon the Foreign Policy Association's coverage of Africa, the FPA has started a new blog with roots extending from the South Africa Blog. The Africa Blog will cover both continentwide issues as well as regional and country concerns. I will be the senior editor/blogger at the Africa blog while continuing my work here at the South Africa Blog.
The change will allow this blog to emphasize South African issues more specifically while still giving both the FPA and me a voice on larger African affairs. The biggest change will likely come in the fact that within the next few days I will shift coverage of Zimbabwe to the Africa blog. I hope that you will read and engage with both blogs.
Welcome to the Africa Blog
I would like to welcome you all to the Foreign Policy Association's new Africa Blog. Some of you may be familiar with me from the FPA's South Africa Blog, which I have run for nearly a year now. I will serve as the senior blogger/senior editor of the Africa Blog, but we will also add contributors in the days and weeks to come. My goal here will be to increase Africa's profile by emphasizing both continent-wide issues and concerns within particular regions and countries. I will still continue to work at the South Africa blog as well, but this will provide an opportunity to rationalize our Africa coverage.
We ask that you be patient as we get started and welcome comments, questions, and criticism about anything that we write.
More on Bush in Africa
My apologies for the light posting this week. I’ve been down and out with a nasty case of the flu for the last few days. Things will pick back up as I recover from my current zombie status.
In the meantime, you should read this piece on President Bush's trip to Africa by the Foreign Policy Association's Robert Nolan. His views in some ways dovetail with mine, though his assessments are perhaps ultimately more charitable than are mine, as I contend that the bar has been set so low with regard to American foreign policy toward Africa that Bush's mixed record seems perhaps better than it is. Still, it is nice to know that I am not the only person giving the President some respect on this issue, however tepid and begrudging (in my case, at least).
South Africa’s Foreign Policy
I’d like to apologize for the paucity of posting. The Foreign Policy Association has been upgrading its blog server and there have been some glitches, but it looks like we’re back up and running. Thanks for your patience.
The Council on Foreign Relations has a feature on how some think South Africa is underachieving in its role as a regional power. I’ve written that South Africa has to walk a tightrope in its role as a regional superpower. And it seems that much of the western consternation exists at least in part because South Africa taking a stronger role allows the west to abdicate a stronger role in the region. but it is nonetheless true that South Africa appears to have lost the plot with regard to its foreign affairs. Where once Mbeki preached a vibrant and engaging vision of Pan Africanism, now he appears content to traffic in platitudes and to operate out of narrow self interest. Of course there is a certain irony to the west complaining about South Africa placing self interest first in the queue, but that does not in and of itself mean that some of the criticisms going pretoria's way are not warranted.
For my American readers, have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
Great Decisions Fall 2007 Updates
The Foreign Policy Association has posted its Great Decisions series updates for fall 2007. Please avail yourself of these wonderful resources. (Here is the South Africa update.)
Great Decisions Analysis: The Vlok Trial and a Reconciliation With the Truth
The Foreign Policy Association has published another of my Great Decisions Analysis pieces. “The Vlok Trial and a Reconciliation With the Truth” looks at the recent criminal proceedings against Adriaan Vlok, South Africa's Minister of Law and Order in the 1980s, and four other members of the security apparatus for a bizarre attempted murder that involved the attempted poisoning of the underwear of anti-Apartheid cleric Frank Chikane in hopes of killing him with neuro-toxins.
The case involves the intersection of my two main areas of interest in South Africa: the state response to the anti-Apartheid movement in the 1980s and the post-Apartheid push for truth, reconciliation, and justice. Almost literally as the piece was posted, it was announced that Vlok pleaded guilty along with his co-accused. By working out a deal, Vlok was able to avoid jail time, though he did receive a ten-year suspended sentence and one assumes that these may not be the last charges he sees.
(Cross-posted at dcat.)
The AU and the United States of Africa
The Foreign Policy Association's own Robert Nolan has been reporting on the African Union Summit in Accra. His recent FPA piece on early steps to establish a United States of Africa can also be found at allAfrica.
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