THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA'S POST-1990 FOREIGN POLICY TOWARDS WEST AFRICA: THE CASE STUDY OF GHANA

KB Shai, RR Molapo, T Sodi
2017 Journal for Contemporary History  
This explorative study uses Ghana as a test case to critique the post-Cold War foreign policy of the United States of America (hereafter referred to as the US) towards West Africa. It does this by contemporaneously locating the US relationship with Ghana within a historical and regional context. History is crucial in this regard, because the past provides a sound basis for understanding the present and the future. To add, in International Politics, theory holds sway and history is used as a
more » ... ratory. In this article, the researchers propose Afrocentricity as an alternative theoretical paradigm crucial in understanding US foreign policy towards Africa in general. As shall be seen, such a paradigm remains critical in highlighting the peculiarity of the US relationship with Ghana. It is envisaged that a deeper understanding of the US foreign policy towards Ghana is achievable when its analysis and interpretation is located within a broader regional (West Africa) and continental (Africa) context. The two central questions that are grappled with in
doi:10.18820/24150509/jch42.v1.9 fatcat:ltsso67earcmvly55x2r3f3dbq