Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Framework for Industrialization in Africa

View through CrossRef
This practical, solutions-oriented approach to African development provides a detailed overview of the steps needed for industrialization. It includes lessons from the developed world as well as descriptions of key facets of Africa's current environment. It outlines the resources now available to the nations of Africa and gives examples, both broad and specific, from other successful development programs. Policy makers, business professionals, and academics and students will find the overview presented in this book comprehensive and practical. The author examines agriculture, manufacturing, natural resources, transportation, and urbanization in the context of classical and modern economic and development theory. The experiences of other regions, including Europe during the Industrial Revolution and the United States in the twentieth century are offered as examples of possible paths to follow. An appendix provides a detailed look at each country in Africa, which includes population, resources, language groups, and other relevant information.
Title: Framework for Industrialization in Africa
Description:
This practical, solutions-oriented approach to African development provides a detailed overview of the steps needed for industrialization.
It includes lessons from the developed world as well as descriptions of key facets of Africa's current environment.
It outlines the resources now available to the nations of Africa and gives examples, both broad and specific, from other successful development programs.
Policy makers, business professionals, and academics and students will find the overview presented in this book comprehensive and practical.
The author examines agriculture, manufacturing, natural resources, transportation, and urbanization in the context of classical and modern economic and development theory.
The experiences of other regions, including Europe during the Industrial Revolution and the United States in the twentieth century are offered as examples of possible paths to follow.
An appendix provides a detailed look at each country in Africa, which includes population, resources, language groups, and other relevant information.

Related Results

Made in Africa
Made in Africa
The role of industry in low income countries is important. Industry is good for growth, job creation, and poverty reduction. All of these factors depend on the size and the rate of...
Industrialization
Industrialization
Industrialization refers to an economic transformation that is recent and different in scale and scope from the mere making of artifacts and has involved the rapid rise in the sign...
Petrarch’s Africa and Its Afterlives
Petrarch’s Africa and Its Afterlives
This open access monograph sheds new light on the epic by focusing on its importance as a vector for ideas about Africa and Africans between the 14th and 20th centuries.In Italy an...
Lost Glory
Lost Glory
Lost Glory: India’s Capitalism Story describes India’s industrialization experiences. Questions about long-term industry and productivity evolution, and their impact on economic gr...
Industrialization and Sport
Industrialization and Sport
This chapter considers three main aspects of sport and industrialization. First, it challenges the conventional wisdom that the British Industrial Revolution was the catalyst for t...
Africa in World History: The Long, Long View
Africa in World History: The Long, Long View
This article describes the origins of Africa; the ‘First Great Transition’ of human history from foraging to food production; the era of agricultural elaboration; the ‘Second Great...
Hot Spot: Sub-Saharan Africa
Hot Spot: Sub-Saharan Africa
This book provides an extensive examination of the major conflicts in the extremely volatile region of sub-Saharan Africa and their ramifications throughout the continent and beyon...
Beyond History
Beyond History
Moving beyond a self-indulgent attitude about Africa’s historical victimhood, the book seeks to capture how African states individually and Africa’s collective institutions (the AU...

Back to Top