1. Charting New Frames for African Global Engagement: Resuscitated Histories, Reimagined Concepts, and Reapplied Contexts
2. South Africa’s Ubuntu BRICS and Nigeria’s Africapitalist MINT: The Political Economy of (Pan) African (Risings)
3. Identity, Ideas, and Institutions in Global Transformation: The Critical Social Theory of African Economic Humanism
4. Afro-modern Entrepreneurs and New (Pan) African Business Leaders: Bios, Projects, Practices, and Impacts
5. Pan “Africa” Rising: The Paradox of Culture, Third Ways, and Co-Producing Global Development
Rita Kiki Edozie is Professor of International Relations and African Affairs and former Director of African American and African Studies at Michigan State University, USA.
This book uses Nigeria’s Afri-capitalist and South Africa’s Ubuntu Business models as case studies that reconcile the tension between Africa Rising and Pan African economics, presenting their convergence as Africa’s viable Third Way route to global development. In presenting Afri-capitalism and Ubuntu Business as national, business sector manifestations of a “new” Pan Africanism, the author explores Africa’s “culturalist” path in engaging the international political economy. This is an African customized engagement that parallels the alternative models of China’s “market-socialism” and Latin America’s “21st C Socialism”. All present alternatives to realist, liberal, and structuralist standpoints, inclining instead toward constructivist political economies derived from the perspectives and subject conditions of African economic histories, socio-cultures, alternative modernities, and agent-led initiatives.