- Docente: Corrado Tornimbeni
- Crediti formativi: 8
- SSD: SPS/13
- Lingua di insegnamento: Inglese
- Moduli: Corrado Tornimbeni (Modulo 1) Arrigo Pallotti (Modulo 2)
- Modalità didattica: Convenzionale - Lezioni in presenza (Modulo 1) Convenzionale - Lezioni in presenza (Modulo 2)
- Campus: Bologna
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Corso:
Laurea Magistrale in
Sviluppo locale e globale (cod. 5912)
Valido anche per Laurea Magistrale in International Relations (cod. 9084)
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Orario delle lezioni (Modulo 1)
dal 19/02/2024 al 22/05/2024
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Orario delle lezioni (Modulo 2)
dal 19/02/2024 al 22/05/2024
Conoscenze e abilità da conseguire
At the end of the course students will know the main policies and institutions of the EU-partnership in the fields of security and development cooperation, within the framework of the international debate on these topics. In particular, students will be able to: analyze the contemporary literature concerning the political and military relations between the EU and Africa; discuss and contextualize the main global and regional processes of transformation defining the relations between the EU and Africa, - understand the historical evolution of the UE-Africa security and development cooperation ; organize and retrieve bibliographic and documentary sources using libraries and web materials.
Contenuti
The course is organized in lectures (aiming to introduce students to the core tenets of the discipline) and seminars (aiming to provide occasions for in-depth discussions of class materials). For the seminar section of the course, students will be divided in 2 groups.
PART A – Corrado Tornimbeni
Lecture 1) Colonization: a new political order
- M. Crowder, Indirect Rule: French and British Style, in Journal of the International African Institute, vol. 34, no. 3, 1964
Lecture 2) Decolonization: the puzzle of the cold war
- P. Nugent, Africa since Independence. A Comparative History, Palgrave MacMillan, 2004, Chapter 1.
Lecture 3) France and Africa: stability and state-building
- E. Schmidt, Foreign Intervention in Africa. From the Cold War to the War on Terror, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013, Chapter 7
Lecture 4) Portugal and UK in Southern Africa: cold war and late independences
- E. Schmidt, Foreign Intervention in Africa. From the Cold War to the War on Terror, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013, Chapters 4 and 5
Seminar class 1 (group 1 / group 2): Decolonisation and conflict in the Congo
- E. Schmidt, Foreign Intervention in Africa. From the Cold War to the War on Terror, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013, Chapter 3
Seminar class 2 (group 1 / group 2): Rwanda and the Genocide
- G. Prunier, “Opération Turquoise: A Humanitarian Escape from a Political Dead End”, in H. Adelman, A. Suhrke (eds.), The Path of a Genocide. The Rwanda Crisis from Uganda to Zaire, Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, 2000.
Seminar class 3 (group 1 / group 2): Zimbabwe and UK
- B.-M. Tendi, “The origins and functions of demonisation discourses in Britain–Zimbabwe relations (2000–)”, Journal of southern African studies, 40.6 (2014): 1251-1269.
or
- I. Taylor and P. Williams, “The limits of engagement: British foreign policy and the crisis in Zimbabwe”, International Affairs, 78.3 (2002): 547-566.
PART B – Arrigo Pallotti
Lecture 5) The Lome Convention
I. Montana, The Lomé Convention from Inception to the Dynamics of the Post-Cold War, 1957-1990s, in African and Asian Studies, vol. 2, no. 1, 2003.
T. Parfitt, The Decline of Eurafrica? Lomé’s Mid-Term Review, in Review of African Political Economy, vol. 23, no. 67, 1996.
Lecture 6) Cotonou Parternship Agreement and democracy in Africa
G. R. Olsen, Europe and the Promotion of Democracy in post-Cold War Africa: How seriuos is Europe and for what Reason?, in African Affairs, vol. 97, no. 388, 1998.
Lecture 7) Cotonou Parternship Agreement and trade cooperation
C. Stevens, The EU, Africa and Economic Partnership Agreements: Unintended Consequences of Policy Leverage, in Journal of Modern African Studies, vol. 44, no. 3, 2006.
M. Langan, S., Price, Extraversion and the West African EPA Development Programme: Realising the Development Dimension of ACP–EU Trade?, in Journal of Modern African Studies, vol. 53, no. 3, 2015.
Lecture 8) The EU and security in Africa
N. Duggan, O. Hodzi, The challenges of China-European Union security cooperation in Africa, in Asia Europe Journal, 2020.
Seminar class 4 (group 1/group 2): The EU and the Mediterranean countries
G. Joffé, Regionalism, the European Union and the Arab Awakening, in M. Telò (ed), European Union and New Regionalism, 3rd edition, London, Routledge, 2014.
Seminar class 5 (group 1/group 2): The EU and migration from Africa
S. Lavenex, R. Kunz, The Migration-Development Nexus in EU External Relations, in Journal of European Integration, vol. 30, no. 3, 2007.
T. Rati, R. Shilhav, The EU Trust Fund for Africa. Trapped between Aid Policy and Migration Politics, Oxford, Oxfam, gennaio 2020 (https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/bp-eu-trust-fund-africa-migration-politics-300120-en.pdf),
Seminar class 6 (group 1/group 2): China's challenge to the EU in Africa
U. Wissenback, The EU’s Response to China’s Africa Safari: Can Triangular Co-operation Match Needs?, in S. Henson, F. Yap (eds), The Power of the Chinese Dragon, Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2016.Testi/Bibliografia
Students attending classes:
See readings in ‘Course contents’.
Readings for students not attending classes
A. Adebajo, K. Whiteman (eds), The EU and Africa. From Euroafrique to Afro-Europa, London, Hurst & C., 2012.
A. Adebajo, The Curse of Berlin. Africa after the Cold War, London, Hurst & C., 2010.
E. Schmidt, Foreign Intervention in Africa.From the Cold War to the War on Terror, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013.
P. Nugent, Africa since Independence. A Comparative History, Palgrave MacMillan, 2004, Chapter 1.
F. Cooper, Africa Since 1940. The Past of the Present, Cambridge University Press 2002, Chapters 3, 4, Interlude.
Metodi didattici
The course provides an integrated structure between class attendance and the students’ preparatory work. Attending students are required to attend classes after reading in advance the texts related to the Section of the course in which they are engaged. The students will attend classes for 28 hours as follows:
* Part (A):
- 4 lectures (8 hours): Students will be invited to debate the issues of the course programme during the presentation by the professor.
- 3 seminar classes (6 hours): Students, divided in two groups, should be prepared to present the case-study indicated for each seminar class.
* Part (B):
- 4 lectures (8 hours): Students will be invited to debate the issues of the course programme during the presentation by the professor.
- 3 seminar classes (6 hours): Students, divided in two groups, should be prepared to present the case-study indicated for each seminar class.
(No more than two absences are allowed both in lecture and seminar classes to be considered as attending students).
Modalità di verifica e valutazione dell'apprendimento
A written exam at the end of the course
Strumenti a supporto della didattica
Power-point presentations.
Orario di ricevimento
Consulta il sito web di Corrado Tornimbeni
Consulta il sito web di Arrigo Pallotti
SDGs
L'insegnamento contribuisce al perseguimento degli Obiettivi di Sviluppo Sostenibile dell'Agenda 2030 dell'ONU.