Regionalism Into Globalism? War Into Peace? SADC and ECOWAS Compared
Regionalism Into Globalism? War Into Peace? SADC and ECOWAS Compared
The lure of regionalism has had profound effects on the foreign policies of African countries. It is contended that such collaborative efforts will serve as building blocks of a future African Economic Community and African Union. This article explores the experiences of SADC and ECOWAS, prominent African subregional organisations. With the domestic state that is more vulnerable to transnational and international developments, globalisation erodes the capacity of the state to pursue broad-based projects and undermines and transforms international relations. This leads to the ‘new security dilemma’ with the state system becoming the key source of insecurity in the contemporary world. The search for security increasingly involves the resort to different forms of exit from the system. State-centric regional co-operation thus becomes less important and in some cases obsolete. The experiences in Africa suggest a call for a more modest expectation of what regional integration can realistically achieve.
CITATION: Van Nieuwkerk Anthoni. Regionalism Into Globalism? War Into Peace? SADC and ECOWAS Compared . : Taylor & Francis Group , . African Security Review, Vol. 10, Number 2, PP. 7-18, 2001 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frregionalism-globalism-war-peace-sadc-and-ecowas-compared-3