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Nigeria and the Ecowas Protocol on Free Movement and Residence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
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During the past 25 years, there have been several efforts by developing countries to establish regional economic institutions to address their poverty, underdevelopment, and external dependency. Although the economic imperatives and rationales for their creation intuitively seemed sufficient to ensure that the national political leaderships would choose to engage in whatever give-and-take was necessary to achieve their stated goals, the historical record reveals that these regional organisations have experienced uneven results at best. Several are now defunct. Why is this the case?
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page 251 note 1 The list includes the following, with the date of their establishment: 1960, Mercado Commún Centroamericano (M.C.C.A.); 1960, Asociación Latinoamericano de Libre Comercio (A.L.A.L.C.); 1961, Organisation commune africaine et malgache (O.C.A.M.); 1964, Union douanière et économique de l'Afrique centrale (U.D.E.A.C.); 1964, Comisión Económico Coordinado Latinoamericano (C.E.C.L.A.); 1967, Association of South-East Asian Nations (A.S.E.A.N.); 1967, East African Community (E.A.C.); 1969, Andean Common Market (Ancom); 1969, Southern African Customs Union (S.A.C.U.); 1973, Caribbean Community (Caricom); 1973, Mano River Union (M.R.U.); 1973, Communauté économique de l'Afrique de l'ouest (C.E.A.O.); 1975, Sistema Económico Latinoamericano (S.E.L.A.); 1975, Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas); 1975, Communauté économique des pays des Grands Lacs (C.E.P.G.L.); 1979, Southern African Development Co-ordination Conference (S.A.D.C.C.); 1980, Asociación Latinoamericano de Integractión (A.L.A.D.I.); 1981, Eastern and Southern African Preferential Trade Area (E.S.A.P.T.A.); 1981, Communauté économique des états d'Afrique centrale (C.E.E.A.C.).
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