Conversations on Europe: Yaoundé Conventions 60 Years on: Africa-EU Relations Now

Nov
14
12:30 pm
Event Status
As Scheduled
It is 60 years since the signing of the Yaoundé Convention (1963). This was a moment in the history of decolonization when the Associated African States, 12 mainly young postcolonial Western African countries, signed a trade agreement with the also young European Economic Community. The Yaoundé Convention was part of the EEC’s Eurafrica initiative, an effort to maintain a presence in the former colonies. Yaoundé initiated a series of trade and aid agreements that replaced the colonial relation with a developmental model. An era of trade and infrastructural development followed. However, many critics have suggested that this strategy of aid set off a pattern of uneven and unequal development. This Conversation on Europe and Africa takes this event as an opportunity to consider development aid in Africa historically and in its contemporary form. Our panelists bring a mix of historical and regional knowledge to the conversation, including Mounir Saidani from CERES in Tunis. Although Tunisia was not part of the Yaoundé convention, it is at the center of controversial aid discussions: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's recent visit to Tunis as part of a deal of aid for migration "control” left many critics concerned about this new turn in EU-Africa relations. Moderator: Randall Halle, University of Pittsburgh Panelists: Mounir Saidani, Editor in Chief of Omran Social Sciences Periodical issued by Arabb Center for Research and Political Studies- Doha Pernille Røge, University of Pittsburgh Michael Odijie, Univeristy College London Abdou Seck, Gaston Berger University, Groupe D’Action et D’Etude Critique Africa (GAEC)
Virtual event
Location
Zoom Webinar
Event Type
Lecture Series / Brown Bag
Add to My Calendar