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Summary Theories of African International Relations 2025/26

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Complete very structured Summary Theories of African International Relations

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THEORIES OF AFRICAN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS




1

,CLASS 1: INTRODUCTION




THE IMPORTANCE OF MAPS (ZELEZA, 2006)

 More than a representation of the geographical world
 Cognitive system, a material culture, and a social construction
 European mapping of Africa & imperialism:
o Exploration and colonisation
o Ideological architecture
 E.g. Mercator’s projection
 Kingdoms
 How do people think less about oldest continent in the world?
o Africa has always mattered: it is the origin of human kind
o Scientifically speaking
o Leakeys (british people) studied origin of IR
 Why does racism exist if everybody knows scientifically that we are from that continent? Eg
gorillas and monkeys
AU urges adoption of world map showing continent’s true size




2

,WHERE TO START?

 Africa’s history didn’t start with Europe
 Its history, identities, languages and its international relations existed long before modern
colonisation
 “Precolonial” Africa
o Precolonial/ colonial/ post-colonial divisions: risk of homogenising or idea of
‘prehistory’ (see Táíwò, 2023)
 Putting colonial in the center
o Instead recognise complex and many different histories before European
colonisation
 Powerful empires and major cities like Timbuktu, Gao, Djenne
 Colonialism and slavery introduced by Europeans
o And to create baseline to understand colonialism and its disruptions

AFRICAN GLOBAL TRADE

 Countries on border on the oceans matter a lot  economic advantage over landlocked
countries
o Somalia, Djibouti, Egypt: ocean
 Reframing importance of the continent in IR
 Columbus invented Africa? No he just colonized it
 Vast trade networks: within Africa and between other regions of the world (see e.g.
Chirikure, 2017)
o E.g. trans-Saharan trade, Indian ocean, Mediterranean
o Trade routes matter: trade between west African cities and lgea
o Often hearing China-African and India-African relations presented as if it is new
 not true, trade has been there for a long time
 Not isolated from the rest of the world!
 Gold, tobacco, copper, spices, salt, ebony, ivory, skins, slaves…
o Food drives IR



3

,  Spices that come from Africa, those markets where these spices are traded
are the centres where people meet
o Slaves: traded at very high cost
 Slavery started before Europeans or Americans adopted it
 Cultural exchange and ties
o E.g. spread of Islam in West Africa in 8th century
o Economic power -> urban growth, education, culture
 Many difficulties in documenting precolonial trade
o Methods:
 Archeology, historical linguists, scientific techniques
 Motivations beyond economy: sociocultural, political, religious
 From local to intercontinental scale & highly varied depending on time and region
 Local perspectives vs external traders
o Autonomy and complexity of local economies

AFRICA: CARAVANS OF GOLD VIDEO

 Caravans of gold: Shows what trade looked like
 Mali: today among the poorest countries, 600 years ago wealth
o Economy based on gold
 Long before European contact, West Africa was part of a vast, peaceful, and sophisticated
global trade network connected to North Africa, the Middle East, India, and China.
 Empires like Ghana, Mali, and Songhai were wealthy, stable, and highly organized,
challenging the idea that Africa lacked civilization, trade, or global connections before
Europe.

Pre-European Trade & Global Connections

 A powerful trade network existed across Africa before Europeans arrived.
 Trade routes connected inland West Africa to North Africa, the Sahara, mediterranean world,
the Middle East, India and China (indirectly through global trade networks)
 The Niger River was a major inland trade artery, moving goods across vast regions.

The Mali Empire and Wealth

 The medieval Empire of Mali was one of the wealthiest trading systems in the world.
 Mali’s wealth was based largely on gold, especially from regions in present-day Mali and
Ghana.
 Trading cities like Djenné (Jenné) and Mopti were major commercial centers.
 Gold was used as:
o A medium of trade
o A symbol of status and political power
 The wealth of West Africa influenced neighboring regions and distant markets.

Gold and Regional Power


4

Escuela, estudio y materia

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Subido en
11 de junio de 2026
Número de páginas
126
Escrito en
2025/2026
Tipo
RESUMEN

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