The issue includes articles on South Africa as an emerging power in which Maxi Schoeman asks whether Pretoria has moved from that label to ‘status consistency’, on South African-Russian relations from Russian scholar Irina Filatova, on EU-South African relations and implications for Africa by Lorenzo Fioramonti and John Kotsopoulos, and on the role of African Union law in integrating Africa, by Michele Olivier.
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 are:
- South Africa’s world: Perspectives on diplomacy, international political economy, and international law, by Deon Geldenhuys
- The weak domestic base of South Africa’s good global citizenship, by Deon Geldenhuys
- South Africa as an emerging power: from label to ‘status consistency’? by Maxi Schoeman
- Third time lucky? Establishing diplomatic relations between Russia and South Africa, by Irina Filatova
- The evolution of EU–South Africa relations: What influence on Africa? by Lorenzo Fioramonti & John Kotsopoulos
- The foreign policy and diplomatic attributes of a developmental state: South Africa as case study, by Chris Landsberg & Costa Georghiou
- Cultural diplomacy: Should South Africa give it a try? by Costa A. Georghiou
- The role of African Union law in integrating Africa, by Michèle E. Olivier
Book reviews:
- Ethnicity, democracy and citizenship in Africa: Political marginalisation of Kenya’s Nubians, by Westen K. Shilaho
- China’s second continent: How a million migrants are building a new empire in Africa, by Garret Brent
- Dams, displacement, and the delusion of development: Cahora Bassa and its legacies in Mozambique, 1965–2007, by Richard Meissner
- How South Africa works and must do better, by Christopher John Day
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.