Power Dynamics in International Negotiations toward Equitable Policies, Partnerships, and Practices: Why it Matters for Africa, the Developing World, and their Higher Education Systems
(also in this issue: N’Dri Assié-Lumumba; Ali A. Mazrui; Martial Dembélé, Olivier Labé; Geneviève Sirois; Albert Motivans; Michael Bruneforth, Ali A. Abdi, Birgit Brock-Utne, and Tukumbi Lumumba-Kasongo)
Abstract:
Based on lessons learned from examining the relationship between several
international organizations and African higher education, this paper
unveils the subtleties and complexities of power dynamics in
negotiations, provides illustrative cases to enhance such understanding,
discusses the implications of power dynamics in negotiations over
higher education policy, and provides a glimpse at the necessary
ingredients to build sustainable and healthy international partnerships.
Based in a conceptual framework of power dynamics, the paper hinges on
international regimes for its theoretical foundation, and on the
intersection of conflicting agendas for a transformative higher
education in Africa, as advocated by the Association of African
Universities (AAU) and the General Agreement on Trade in Services
(GATS), for its historical framework. An understanding of the subtleties
and complexities of power dynamics in international negotiations is
critical for Africa at this crossroads of her relationship with BRIC
countries, particularly amidst the competition between China and other
superpowers and their respective organizations over Africa as a market
arena. This understanding will also be important for examining newly
claimed ‘reformed’ policies originating from the historically dominant
Western countries because (a) the dimensions of this relationship are
still being negotiated/established, thus a good time to address power
dynamics; (b) Africa is engaged in a quest for development through
partnerships; and, (c) African scholars are often confronted with the
idea of a higher education system by African design. With a focus on
Africa that simultaneously highlights the problem of developing nations
more generally, this paper discusses four categories of power –
hermeneutical, informational, manipulative, and monetary – that must be
taken seriously into account in international negotiations as they have
dire consequences for the developing world.
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