From the Congo to Soweto : U.S. foreign policy toward Africa since 1960 / created by Henry F. Jackson.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0688007724
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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School of Social Work Library Open Shelf | DT38.7 JAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 151547 | Available | BK138659 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Chapter 1 The Congo: emergence of the United States, 2 - Angloa : rise of the cold war in Africa, 3 - Egypt: Sadat and the decline of U.S.power, 4 - Afro-Americans and Africa: the unbroken link, 5 - U.S. Economic reliance on Africa, 6 - U.S. Military and strategic stakes, 7 - Soweto: decision time for U.S. policy in South Africa
This provocative study touches all the bases, probing the important cases of U.S. involvement in Africa (the Congo, Angola, South Africa), laying out U.S. interests in Africa's minerals and strategic outposts, and depicting the concern of American blacks with Africa since the nineteenth century. Riding his theses rather hard, Jackson argues strongly against an ineluctable U.S. tendency to react in cold-war terms to African crises.
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