Introduction
Part I: Conceptions of Well-Being in African(a) Intercultural Philosophy
Chapter One: Human Well-Being in Intercultural Philosophical Perspective: A Focus on the Akan Philosophy of Wiredu, Gyekye, and Appiah, by Louise Müller
Chapter Two: This Thing Called Communitarianism or Why We Should Not Be afraid of the Community, by Nimrod Kahn
Chapter Three: Being-in-Community as the Basis of Well-Being in African Philosophy, by Pius Mosima
Chapter Four: Personhood, Well-Being, and Ethical Maturity in African Philosophy, by Alloy S. Ihuah
Part II: Well-Being in African Contexts
Chapter Five: Social Ethics and Human Well-Being in Igbo Society, by J Chidozie Chukwuokolo
Chapter Six: Religion, Education, and the Well-Being of Citizens of Nigeria, by Olutoyin Mejiuni and Bolaji Olukemi Bateye
Chapter Seven: A Non-Individualistic Notion of the Common Good, by Abdoulaye Ba
Chapter Eight: The Pursuant of Well-Being in Contemporary Africa, by Beatrice Okyere-Manu, Ovett Nwosimiri, and Stephen Nkansah Morgan
Part III: Contributions to a Global Ethics of Development
Chapter Nine: Ujamaa: Society as Family, by Martin F. Asiegbu and Simeon Dimonye
Chapter Ten: African Precolonial Accomplishments in Political, Social, and Economic Well-Being, by Andrew Akampurira
Chapter Eleven: A Philosophy of Race in the Melting Pot of Globalisation and its Implications for Africa, by Wilfred Lajul
Chapter Twelve: Gilles Paquet’s Hermeneutics of Belongingness: On Collaborative Ethics of Global Development, by Stanley Uche Anozie