Regional Integration and Africa's Development Trajectory: meta-theories, expectations and reality
Author: Richard Gibb.
Gibb, Richard. 2009. "Regional Integration and Africa's Development Trajectory: meta-theories, expectations and reality." Third World Quarterly 30 (4): 701-721.
Regional integration remains an integral part of Africa’s development
strategy and has underpinned most pan-African development policies for
the past 50 years. This paper explores the issue of regional integration in the
context of ‘development’ theory and the neo-patrimonial state system in Africa.
A central contention of the paper is that Western, Euro-centric conceptions of
regionalism, particularly those centred on the market integration approach, have
promoted a very biased understanding of regional integration in many parts of
the developing world. Using southern Africa as an exemplar case study, the
paper argues that the various meta-theories focused on explaining the political
economy of regionalism, often closely allied to a development theory paradigm,
fail to account for the nature, character and evolution of regional integration.
Regional integration in sub-Saharan Africa has been conceived and analysed in
the light of the market-led approach, modernity and development. Thus far, it is
has failed. This paper therefore explores why market-led regional integration
has failed and why, for the foreseeable future, it will continue to do so.Published: 2009Typ: journalArticleISSN: