NEPAD and the Challenge of Africa’s Development:

Towards the political economy of a discourse

Authors

  • Jìmí O. Adésínà

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/ajia.v4i1-2.45817

Keywords:

NEPAD, Challenger, Africa's developement, political economy of a discourse

Abstract

Abstract:
The critical necessity of development for Africa in the 21ˢᵗ century is an issue around which there
is considerable consensus. There is, however, little agreement on the nature of the crisis, the
required development framework, and the ‘desired state’. In the context of the debate, the New
Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) has been promoted by its authors and sponsors as
Africa’s development blueprint for meeting its development challenges. Much of the criticism of
NEPAD has focused, procedurally, on the lack of consultation in its drafting, and,
paradigmatically, on its neo- liberal content, the same set of policy instruments that have damaged
Africa over the last 20 years. The latter underscores the sense of betrayal that comes through
civil society resistance to NEPAD. The question though is this: Why would a group of African
leaders, who seem genuine in their concerns, take responsibility for such policy framework? The
paper seeks an explanation in the complex interaction between a set of developments since 1980: the
neo-liberal hegemony at the level of state policymaking, internal policy atrophy, coercive power of
compliance, but equally the new constituencies (class forces) that have been thrown up in the last
two decades – within the state, economy, and importantly the civil society in sub-Saharan Africa.
Much of the latter is premised on the ‘death of the emancipatory project’ and the dominant politics
of the petty bourgeois class in Africa. It is in this sense that we understanding NEPAD as a class
project, hence, its import.
Introduction

Author Biography

Jìmí O. Adésínà

Department of Sociology, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa. E-mail:
J.Adesina@ru.ac.za.

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Published

2023-08-02