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The Lomé Convention: inching towards interdependence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
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The European Common Market and forty odd African, Caribbean, and Pacific States (ACP) signed a trade and aid Convention in February 1975. The negotiations leading to the Lome Convention and the provisions of the Lomé Convention constitute an instructive vehicle for an examination of North-South bargaining. The organization, tenacity, and skill of the ACP states, as well as some re-thinking regarding their own situation on the part of European states produced some innovative and groundbreaking moves toward more equitable trade and aid relations. But even the most innovative components of the Lome Convention, STAB EX, sugar indexing and focus on industrial development, are perhaps less significant for their short-term economic effects than they are for a general understanding regarding the structure of North-South relations.
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References
1 For a recent statement of this theme which is characteristic of the meager literature in this area see: Kothari, Rajni, Footsteps into the Future (New York: Free Press, 1974)Google Scholar.
2 For a cogent and timely discussion of these issues see Lewis, John “Oil and other Scarcities and Poor Countries,” World Politics Vol. 28, 10 1974, No. 1Google Scholar.
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6 For detailed discussions of the history and development of African EEC Association see: Zartman, William, The Politics of Trade Negotiations between Africa and the European Economic Community: The Weak Confront the Strong (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1971)Google Scholar, Okigbo, Pnc, Africa and the Common Market (London: Longmans Green and Co., 1967)Google Scholar.
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8 Nye, Joseph Jr, Pan Africanism and East African Integration (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1965)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See especially Chapter 7.
9 Philip, Kjeld, etc., Intra-African Economic Co-operation and Africa's Relations with the European Economic Community (Economic Commission for Africa, United Nations, 1972.)Google Scholar E/CN.14/L409/WP 6, p. 6, Table 1.
10 Ibid., Table II.
11 Ibid. Tables III and IV.
12 West Africa, 2 July 1973, p. 883.
13 Ibid., 10 Feb. 1975, p. 153.
14 For a complete text of the ACP-EEC Convention of Lomé see: Lomé Dossier reprinted from The Courier, No. 31, Special Issue, March 1975.
15 Kjeld Philip, Economic Commission for Africa Study, E/CN/14/L409.
16 Deniau was the European Commissioner then in charge of Development and Cooperation. For a discussion of the Deniau Memorandum see West Africa, 16 April 1973, pp. 490–1.
17 For a full description of M. Cheysson's background in this regard see: Gruhn, Isebill V., Functionalism in Africa: Scientific and Technical Integration. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1967, Chapter 2Google Scholar.
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20 See Lomé Dossier, p. 6.
21 Lomé Dossier, p. 23.
22 Protocol I, No. I, Title I, Lomé Convention.
23 Title II, Chapter I, Lomé Convention.
24 Protocol III, No. Ill, Lomé Convention.
25 Title III, Lomé Convention.
26 Title IV, Lomé Convention. In January 1975 a unit of account (UA) was the equivalent of $ US 1.24.
27 West Africa, 16 June 1975, p. 692.
28 Ibid., 30 June, 1975, p. 753.
29 The Economists, February 1,1975, p. 52 and August 2, 1975, pp. 70–1.
30 It would appear, for example, that the African Bloc at the Law of the Sea Conferences is forging a good deal of unity regarding its demands at the expense of the needs and desires of some of the weaker and disadvantaged states in the African Bloc. Hollick, for example, calls attention to African organization and unity as compared to other regions. Yet in her discussion of demands made by Africans at the conference one would be led to conclude that the views of the stronger African states appear to prevail. See Hollick, Ann ‘What to Expect from the Sea,“ Foreign Policy, No. 18, Spring 1975Google Scholar.
31 For a general discussion of the ECOWAS Treaty see West Africa, 16 June 1975, p. 678–9.
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