Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
The African continent currently faces severe political and economic crises. Massive debts, unpopular structural adjustment programmes (S.A.P.s), spiralling population growth, democratisation, and régime transformation are all testing national cohesion. Externally, the rapidly changing global environment, marked by the demise of the cold war and the continuing difficulties being experienced in Europe and the Middle East, also provides immense challenges to African policy-makers.
1 See U.N.E.C.A., African Alternative Framework to Structural Adjustment Programmes for Socio Economic Recovery and Transformation (Addis Ababa, 1991).Google Scholar Also, Seidman, Ann and Anang, Frederick (eds.), Twenty-First-Century Africa: towards a new vision of self-sustainanble development (Trenton, NJ, 1992).Google Scholar
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14 Grissa, loc. cit. pp. 124–5.
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26 Ibid.
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34 See Green, Reginald Herbold, ‘Towards Planning Tourism in Developing Countries’, in de Kadt (ed.), op. cit. pp. 79–100.Google Scholar Also, Ahmed Smaoui, ‘Tourism and Employment in Tunisia’, in ibid. pp. 101–10.
35 Enloe, Cynthia, Bananas, Beaches and Bases: making feminist sense of international politics (Berkeley, 1990), p. 34.Google Scholar
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37 Larson, Barbara K., ‘Rural Development in Central Tunisia: constraints and coping strategies’, in Zartman, (ed.), op. cit. p. 143.Google Scholar
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