The political impact of the Sino-U.S. oil competition in Africa: an international political explanation of the resource curse in African petro-states
Author: Didier T. Djoumessi.
Djoumessi, Didier T.. 2009. The political impact of the Sino-U.S. oil competition in Africa: an international political explanation of the resource curse in African petro-states. London: Adonis & Abbey.
The Political Impact of the Sino-U.S. Oil Competition in Africa is an important contribution to the current discussions about the development and security implications of the US-Sino competition for oil in Africa's petro-states. The book focuses on the impact of the growing role of China, on these countries' acceptance of Western policies in general and those of the U.S. in particular. It uses recent U.S. attempts to promote democratic governance in countries like Chad, Angola and Sudan to show how China's competing presence in these African petro-states gradually reduced America's leverage over them. It demonstrates that the level of these African countries' vulnerability to Washington's policies depends on the intensity of the Sino-U.S. competition within their oil sector. The book also contributes to the corpus of theories on resource curse and interdependence through a rigorous review of existing literature, which exposes the inadequacies of existing analyses, and proffers new theoretical insights and methods of measuring inter-state relations.Published: 2009Typ: bookISBN: 978-1-906704-24-7 978-1-906704-25-4