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Development Politics and the Politics of Development in Zimbabwe and Ethiopia*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2021

Barbara P. Thomas*
Affiliation:
Program for International Development, Clark University
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Extract

To the casual observer and the experienced scholar alike, the complexity of the African continent defies imagination. Two of the complicated-and troubled-areas are Southern Africa and the Horn. These two regions with their extraordinary mix of ethnic groups, races, political loyalties, new states, varying colonial experiences, economic concerns and environmental problems challenge the most astute analyst of African affairs. Recently, I had an opportunity to return to Zimbabwe and Ethiopia for a brief visit after a three-year absence. I was intrigued with the possibiltiy of looking more closely at some of the pieces of the Southern Africa and Horn puzzles. I wondered what changes there would be in these two countries since I had last visited them in the summer of 1982.

Type
Insight
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1987 

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Footnotes

Page no 69 note *

This article was written shortly after the author’s return from a trip to Zimbabwe and Ethiopia in March 1985.

References

Page no 69 note * This article was written shortly after the author’s return from a trip to Zimbabwe and Ethiopia in March 1985.