You can access this issue via your university library, if your university holds a subscription, or purchase an individual subscription on the Taylor & Francis website. Individuals based in Africa may purchase an annual subscription for only US$15, by contacting the T&F Customer Services team.
Published by Taylor and Francis, the contents of this issue include the following articles:
- Ensuring that Africa keeps rising: The economic integration imperative, by Adrian D. Saville & Lyal White
- South Africa’s foreign policy and the strategy of soft power, by Olusola Ogunnubi & Ufo Okeke-Uzodike
- Threats to the exploration, production and supply of Africa’s energy resources, by Lord Aikins Adusei
- China–Cameroon relations: Fortunes and limits of an old political complicity, by Jean-Pierre Cabestan
- Implications of foreign direct investment for national sovereignty: The Wal-Mart/Massmart merger as an illustration, by Henri Bezuidenhout & Ewert Kleynhans
- South Africa and AFRICOM: Reflections on a lukewarm relationship, by Theo Neethling
Book reviews:
- Why states recover: Changing walking societies into winning nations, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, by Megan Bybee
- Russia and the world: the internal–external nexus, by Irina Filatova
- Inside South Africa’s foreign policy. Diplomacy in Africa from Smuts to Mbeki, by Chris Saunders
For the full contents, sales and subscription information, please visit the Taylor and Francis website.
Published since 1993, SAIIA’s peer-reviewed journal includes articles on topics such as global and continental governance, multilateralism and political/economic integration, strengthening of democracy and political party systems in Africa, protection of human rights, international trade and investment, governance of natural resources, environmental protection, security and conflict, migration and refugees, religion and ethnicity, the roles of state and non-state actors in international affairs, and the influence of emerging powers on Africa and the world. This is the first issue in the journal’s transition from three to four issues per year.