Lexington Books
Pages: 460
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-7391-0344-9 • Hardback • June 2002 • $180.00 • (£138.00)
Hanes Walton Jr. is Professor of Political Science, African Studies, and African American Studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author and editor of a number of books including Reelection: William Jefferson Clinton as a Native-Son Presidential Candidate. The Rev. James Bernard Rosser Sr. is an episcopal priest in Atlanta, Georgia.Robert L. Stevenson is Professor of Speech and Drama at Savannah State College.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Introduction
Part 3 Prologue
Part 4 Political Background
Chapter 5 Political Patronage: The Political Appointment of an African American Diplomat
Chapter 6 The African American Diplomat in Liberia: The Challenges and Hardships
Chapter 7 The Outsider's Perspective: A New Methodological Approach
Part 8 Liberian Domestic Politics
Chapter 9 The Liberian Political Processes and Institutions
Part 10 Liberian Foreign Policy
Chapter 11 The Liberian Foreign Policy-Making Process
Part 12 Problems & Prospects
Chapter 13 The Documents Revisited: The Roots of Failure of America's Peculiar Relationship with Liberia
Chapter 14 Democracy Stillborn: How Race and Ethnicity Impeded the Transplantation of U.S. Styled Democracy in Liberia
With this book Walton, Rosser, Stevenson, and their collaborators have launched what should become the next generation of Black politics research. By placing African American politics in a larger comparative and world politics context, this book moves the study of race and ethnic politics further along the important path of robust theory building.
— Kerrie L. Haynie, Rutgers University
The work exemplifies an innovative use of diplomatic correspondence as a medium for probing the internal and external relations of a new, unique settler state from the perspective of its first African American diplomat. The result is a penetrating analysis of the foundational character and politics of Liberia, a developing state, including the dynamics of dependency in its domestic and foreign affairs. The book is a valuable and fascinating contribution to the global dimension of African American politics and a probing of the persistent salience of race in international affairs.
— Mae C. King, Howard University
Liberian Politics presents a carefully reasoned and fully rounded socio-political comparative analysis of Liberia which masterfully erects a bridge of acute understanding between African American and Liberian politics.
— J. Allen Zow, Sr., Savannah State University