Zambia: Building Prosperity from Resource Wealth
Edited by Christopher Adam (),
Paul Collier and
Michael Gondwe
in OUP Catalogue from Oxford University Press
Abstract:
Zambia is a landlocked mineral dependent country in Southern Africa whose history is intimately entwined with the copper mining industry. Having gained Independence from Britain in 1964 at the height of a copper boom, the country experienced a slow and painful economic decline over the next quarter century. However, following a traumatic and protracted process of economic adjustment through the 1990s and early 2000s, Zambia's economic potential is now better than it has been at any time since Independence. This book, which contains a set of rigorous but accessible essays by a range of Zambian and international scholars, seeks to examine the challenges and opportunities that currently face Zambian policymakers as they seek to harness the country's valuable natural assets to broad-based and sustainable economic growth over the coming decades. Written in a non-technical manner by leading scholars in the field, the chapters address key challenges in the areas of natural resource management, agriculture, trade, employment and migration, education, finance, and investment. This is the second volume in the Africa: Policies for Prosperity series following on from the successful first volume on Kenya. Contributors to this volume - Christopher Adam Mike Bratton Samuel Bwalya Massimiliano Cali Adriana Cardozo Collins Chansa Nic Cheeseman Francis Chipimo Paul Collier Robert Conrad Shantayanan Devarajan Robert Ford Michael Gondwe Tukiya Kankasa-Mabula Alexander Lippert Peter Lolojih Sylvester Mashamba Gibson Masumbu Isaac Muhanga Mulenga Musepa Chiwama Musonda James Mwansa Austin Mwape Vinayak Nagaraj Francis Ndilila Emmanuel Pamu Jon Pycroft Gael Raballand Sherman Robinson Anthony Simpasa Neo Simutanyi Mirja Sjoblom Monique Vledder Alan Whitworth Ivan Zyuulu
Date: 2014
ISBN: 9780199660605
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