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Canada in Africa

1 Dec 2016

The myth(s) of Canada in Africa O ne key error to avoid is for Canadian policy makers to allow themselves to think that they will be restoring a tradition of active and constructive engagement in the challenges facing the continent – “good international citizenship,” in the terminology of the English School of international relations.2 To be sure, some Canadian officials and civil society groups h [...] In short, a more active presence in Africa will require that the government systematically move beyond the current desultory level of aid spending (below the OECD average, at 0.28% of GNI in 2015), and at the same time forge consistent relationships with governmental and non-governmental “partners” in a stable set of “countries of concentration.”21 At the same time, there are some more positive in [...] However, the end point needs to extend well beyond the ‘disconnected’ relationships that have been the historic norm between development policy makers and non-governmental expertise on Canadian policy toward Africa and elsewhere in the developing world.24 The challenge and opportunity of extractive sector investment A key reason why it has been so difficult to set and sustain a coherent policy app [...] Policy Implications Of course, Canadian-African relationships encompass far more than the issues highlighted in this brief analysis, including long-standing and steadily expanding trans-societal links, other dimensions of trade in goods and services, the seemingly never-ending “crisis” of humanitarianism in the face of protracted humanitarian emergencies, and the challenges and repercussions of cl [...] More concretely, there is a need to increase and sustain the resources (both human and financial) devoted to Africa policy; to engage systematically with the best thinking in this and other countries on the nature of the challenges and opportunities facing the continent; to identify ways in which Canada can bring distinctive priorities and assets to bear in addressing them; and to build and sustai
sustainable development health africa environment aid government politics economy governance mining poverty canada corporate social responsibility economic growth ethics international relations development aid foreign aid sustainable development cooperation society non-governmental organization corporate citizens
ISBN
9781988493114
Pages
14
Published in
Ottawa, ON, CA

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