Introduction - Alusine Jalloh and Toyin Falola and Amanda
Warnock
West Africa and the United States in Historical Perspective - Toyin
Falola and Adebayo Oyebade
The U.S. Consulate and the Promotion of Trade in Sierra Leone,
1850-80 - Ibrahim Kargbo
Stranded Families: Free Colored Responses to Liberian Colonization
and the Formation of Black Families in Nineteenth-Century Richmond,
Virginia - John Wess Grant PhD
The Garvey Aftermath: The Fall, Rise, and Fall - Ibrahim Sundiata
PhD
Economic Relations between Nigeria and the United States in the Era
of British Colonial Rule, ca. 1900-1950 - Ayodeji Olukoju
The United States' Economic and Political Activities in Colonial
West Afric a - Hakeem I. Tijani
Developing a "Sense of Community": U.S. Cultural Diplomacy and the
Place of Africa during the Early Cold War Period, 1953-64 - Karen
B. Bell
African Americans in Ghana and Their Contributions to "Nation
Building" sin since 1985 - Kwame Essien
Perspectives on Ghanaians and African Americans - Harold R.
Harris
The Chasm Is Wide: Unspoken Antagonisms between African Americans
and West Africans - Fred L. Johnson III
Double Consciousness and the Home-Coming of African Americans:
Building Cul tural Bridges in West Africa - Bayo Lawal
Sierra Leoneans in America and Homeland Politics - Alusine
Jalloh
The United States and West Africa: The Institutionalization of
Foreign Rela Relations in an Age of Ideological Ferment - Peter A.
Dumbuya
U.S. Foreign Policy toward West Africa: Democracy, Economic
Development, an d Security - Andrew I. E. Ewoh
U.S. Economic Assistance to West Africa - Abdul Karim Bangura
The West African Enterprise Network: Business Globalists,
Interregional Tra de, and U.S. Interventions - Anita Spring
Poverty Alleviation in Sierra Leone and the Role of U.S. Foreign
Aid: An In stitutional Trap Analysis - Stephen Kandeh
Post-Cold War U.S. Foreign Policy toward Liberia and Sierra Leone -
Osman Gbla
The United States and Security Management in West Africa: A Case
for Cooper rative Intervention - Olawale Ismail
Radical Islam in the Sahel: Implications for U.S. Policy and
Regional Stabi lity - Stephen A. Harmon
Undoing Oil's Curse? An Examination of the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline
Project - Ken Vincent
U.S. Foreign Policy Agenda, 2005-9: Why West Africa Barely Features
- Christopher Ruane
TOYIN FALOLA is Professor of History, University Distinguished Teaching Professor, and the Jacob and Sanger Mossiker Chair in the Humanities at the University of Texas at Austin. TOYIN FALOLA is Professor of History, University Distinguished Teaching Professor, and the Jacob and Sanger Mossiker Chair in the Humanities at the University of Texas at Austin.
A virtual treasure trove of scholarship on one of Africa's most critical sub-regions, The United States and West Africa is long overdue. The authors of these twenty-two essays examine various aspects of U.S.-West African interactions in exquisite detail, offering analyses that are both empirically rich and theoretically informed. Perhaps most importantly, the volume provides the opportunity to hear both African and non-African voices on the relationship in one well-integrated collection. Scholars from a range of disciplines, foreign policy practitioners and students alike, will find the book an essential -- and thought-provoking -- read. --Scott Taylor, director, African Studies Program, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University The United States and West Africa is a tour de force! In this sophisticated collection, Jalloh, Falola, and contributors break new ground, providing fresh, meticulously researched analyses of the myriad factors that have influenced foreign policy and relationships between the United States and West Africa. A must-read for anyone seriously interested in understanding these complex relations in the changing contours of the global economy. -- Bessie House-Soremekun, professor of political science and African American and African Diaspora studies, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis
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