Fr. 69.00

Geopolitics of Southern Africa - South Africa As Regional Superpower

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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South Africa is the dominant force in an area that is of increasing strategic importance to the West, yet few studies address the geopolitical pressures that dictate the course of events there. Analyzing South Africa's base of power, the authors argue that because South Africa's relationships with other states in Southern Africa are asymmetrical in nature, the country has substantial economic and political leverage in the region. Control of Southern Africa's transport infrastructure and the ability to project a conventional or surrogate military presence throughout the region, for example, gives South Africa the power to affect the economic and political stability of virtually all regional states. Asymmetry also characterizes relationships at the global level. Because the West depends upon South Africa for access to the region's strategic minerals, for the security of the Cape oil route, and for the country's ability to counterbalance the Soviet presence in Southern Africa, South Africa exercises considerable influence over the African foreign policies of the superpowers. Focusing on the major geopolitical variables affecting South Africa's ability to sustain power, the authors analyze the economic and geographic factors that contribute to asymmetrical relationships and examine the pluralism that divides South African society. Pretoria's successful foreign policy, which has created a security corridor of new buffer states, is given particular emphasis. In addition, the authors provide a detailed analysis of South Africa's minerals-based economy and discuss the implications for regional stability of economic sanctions against South Africa. Finally, they outline a policy framework that takes regional economic, political, and geographic realities into account.

List of contents

Geopolitical Focus on Southern Africa -- Economic Interdependence -- Pluralism: The Domestic Challenge -- New Buffer States: South Africa's Regional Policy -- South Africa's Mining Industry: Mainstay of the Economy -- Sanctions: A Double-Edged Sword -- Policies with Promise

About the author

"Kent H. Butts is a John M. Olin Fellow at Harvard’s Center for International Affairs.
Paul R. Thomas is an international minerals economist"

Summary

This book examines the economic and geographic factors that contribute to asymmetrical relationships and examines the pluralism that divides South African society, focusing on the major geopolitical variables affecting South Africa's ability to sustain power.

Product details

Authors Kent H Butts, Kent H Thomas Butts, Kent Hughes Butts, Paul R Thomas, Paul R. Thomas
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.06.2021
 
EAN 9780367307974
ISBN 978-0-367-30797-4
No. of pages 193
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Geosciences > Geography
Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Regional Studies, Regional Geography

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