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The Governance,
Security and
Development Nexus
Africa Rising
Edited by
Kenneth Omeje
The Governance, Security and Development Nexus
Kenneth Omeje
Editor

The Governance,
Security
and Development
Nexus
Africa Rising
Editor
Kenneth Omeje
Manifold Crown Research and Training Consult
Bradford, UK
Addis Ababa University
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

ISBN 978-3-030-49347-9 ISBN 978-3-030-49348-6 (eBook)


https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49348-6

© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer
Nature Switzerland AG 2021
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the
Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights
of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on
microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and
retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology
now known or hereafter developed.
The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc.
in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such
names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for
general use.
The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and informa-
tion in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither
the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with
respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been
made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps
and institutional affiliations.

This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature
Switzerland AG
The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland
Preface

This book explores the nexus between governance, security and devel-
opment in Africa as it relates to the narrative that contemporary Africa
has made remarkable progress over the past one and half decades, a
phenomenon captured in influential sections of international media and
academic and policy discourses as “Africa rising.” The book investigates
and interrogates the discursive assumptions and empirical indicators of the
Africa rising narratives. The Africa rising debate is a controversial discourse
postulating that contemporary Africa has made a substantial leap from
the longstanding Valhalla of underdevelopment and its negative gover-
nance and security correlates to the trajectory of sustainable progress. Is
continental Africa finally witnessing what the famous American post-war
economist W. W. Rostow called the “preconditions for take-off” or prob-
ably his actual “take off of self-sustaining economic growth?” In what
specific empirical forms and ways have Africa recorded the highly publi-
cised rising progress or take-off? What are the local, regional and inter-
national factors that have enabled Africa to rise and to what extent are
African states and institutions in command of these variables? Seriously
speaking, what specific countries are rising in Africa—arguably Ethiopia,
Rwanda, Ghana, Tanzania, Mozambique, DRC, Zambia, Uganda, Niger
and Burkina Faso? How well and how fast are they rising? Can we by
any stretch of the imagination justifiably brand any assemblage of the
rising countries the “African tigers”—a conceptual mimicry of the “Asian

v
vi PREFACE

tigers,” the countries that engineered the competitive and rapid ascen-
dancy of the South Asian economies on the global stage over the past 30
years? What is the cumulative national and regional impact of the rising
of any of the African countries said to be on the rise? To what extent
have the ordinary citizens, as well as vulnerable social groups, communi-
ties and states empirically felt the impact of the Africa rising narratives?
Where do we place countries like Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Eritrea,
Cameroun, Central African Republic and Eswatini (to mention but a few
of the countries that seem stuck in a protracted limbo) in the Africa
rising debate? How can the continent build on any recorded performance
successes to leverage the governance, security and development nexus
for the overall benefit and well-being of the African people and states?
These are some of the questions explored in this edited volume with inci-
sive contributions from experts in African economics, politics, conflicts,
security, peacebuilding, development and international relations.
This book comprises a total of 19 commissioned chapters, structured
into five thematic parts. Part I explores the conceptual issues and inter-
rogates the empirical indicators of the governance, security and devel-
opment nexus in the context of Africa rising as reflected and debated in
extant literature. Part II is a critical assessment of the global dimensions of
“Africa rising,” examining the trends and dynamics of Africa—EU (Euro-
pean Union) relations, Africa—US relations, Africa—China relations, as
well as the cumulative direction and impact of foreign direct investments
in Africa. Part III analyses the regional imperatives of Africa rising, the
empirical trends, challenges and opportunities of intra-African trade, as
well as the politics of regional development and economic integration.
Part IV discusses specific national contests of Africa rising, taking a case
study of a few states believed to be on the “rise” and conversely exam-
ining a few other states that represent “the forgotten Africa”—countries
that are seemingly trapped in the doldrums and therefore hardly discussed
in the overall debate.
The book is concluded in Part V, which examines the empirical reali-
ties and macroeconomic imperatives of how Africa can overcome present
obstacles to make more meaningful progress within the prevailing regional
and global economic framework. Overall, the narratives that Africa is
rising on the neoliberal path of development discussed in the various
PREFACE vii

chapters of this book present mixed results of euphoria versus dysphoria,


success versus failure and triumphalism verses cautious optimism. The
book ends with a set of policy-relevant measures and strategies articulated
into a coherent vision that can help Africa to arise or rise sustainably.
I wish to observe that the last set of this book’s manuscripts were
completed during the first quarter of 2020 while the world grappled with
the destabilising scourge of the COVID-19 popularly known as Coron-
avirus (the name of the causative virus). Because the “pandemic” was still
unfolding at the time of completing the manuscripts, it is important to
mention that its impact on the economies of the various African countries
and the overall discourse of “Africa rising” has not been captured in this
volume. I imagine that this will be the subject of many future researches
on this subject whenever the scourge settles, hopefully, not too long from
now.
I greatly commend the passionate commitment of all the chapter
contributors, especially those that were invited at the “eleventh hour”
and had the unenviable challenge of navigating through the logistical
nightmares occasioned by the Coronavirus-instigated lockdown. To the
Palgrave Macmillan Editor of Regional Politics and Development Studies,
Ms. Alina Yurova, I render my unreserved appreciation for your profes-
sional guidance and goodwill. I cannot end this preface without gratefully
acknowledging the unflinching support, prayers and understanding of my
loving wife, Ngozi, and children, Rejoicing, Chibia and Ifediche. I am
blessed to have a wonderful family in you four. To the entire members of
the Crown of Christ Gospel Church in Bradford, my brethren and family
in Christ, I convey my profound gratitude for your spiritual support and
solidarity.

Bradford, UK Kenneth Omeje


Contents

Part I Conceptual and Contextual Background

1 Exploring the Governance, Security and Development


Nexus: Africa Rising? 3
Kenneth Omeje

2 Interrogating the Political Economy of Africa Rising:


Who Are the “African Tigers”? 31
Temitope J. Laniran

Part II Interrogating the Global Dimensions of Africa


Rising

3 Africa-EU Relations and the Politics of International


Development 59
Ibrahim Bangura

4 Africa–US Relations: The Politics of Trade,


Investment and Security 77
Taiwo Owoeye

ix
x CONTENTS

5 The Political Economy of Africa’s Relations


with China 97
Asebe Regassa Debelo

6 Foreign Direct Investments and Africa Rising:


A Critical Assessment 113
Onyukwu E. Onyukwu and Uchenna A. Nnamani

Part III The Regional Imperatives of Africa Rising

7 Regional Trade and Security Cooperation: A Case


Study of the Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) 133
Ibrahim Bangura

8 Trade and Security Cooperation in the SADC Region:


Optimising the Developmental Role of Paradiplomacy 151
Nolubabalo Lulu Magam

9 Trade and Security Cooperation in the Arab Maghreb


Union Region 171
Hamdy A. Hassan

10 The Boko Haram Insurgency and Regional Security


in the Lake Chad Basin: Understanding the Growth
and Development Consequences 193
Usman A. Tar and Samuel Baba Ayegba

11 The AU, RECs, and the Politics of Security


Regionalism in Africa 213
Sabastiano Rwengabo
CONTENTS xi

Part IV Specific National Contexts and “the Forgotten


Africa”

12 Ethiopia’s Economic Growth in the Context


of the Africa Rising Debate 237
Yohannes Tekalign

13 The Price of Progress: Economic Growth,


Authoritarianism, and Human Rights in Rwanda 253
Aymar Nyenyezi Bisoka and Hilde Geens

14 State-Society Relations and State Capacity in Somalia 273


Abdullahi Mohammed Odowa

15 Emerging from the Doldrums? Governance


and Politics in Eritrea 295
Redie Bereketeab

16 The Giant of Africa? Explaining the Nigerian


Governance, Security, and Development Paradox 315
Bashir Bala and Usman A. Tar

17 The Conflicts in the DRC: Wider Ramifications


for the African Great Lakes Region 341
Joseph Lansana Kormoh

18 The “Africa Rising” Paradox, Human Trafficking,


and Perilous Migration Across the Sahara
and the Mediterranean to Europe 355
Anne Kubai

Part V Conclusion and Policy Recommendations

19 From the Narrative of “Africa Rising” to “How Africa


Can Arise”: The Macro-Economic Imperatives 373
Temitope J. Laniran and Kenneth Omeje
Notes on Contributors

Samuel Baba Ayegba is a Lecturer in the Department of Defence and


Security Studies, Nigerian Defence Academy, Kaduna, and a Research
Fellow at the Centre for Defence Studies and Documentation (CDSD),
Nigerian Defence Academy, Kaduna. He completed his M.Sc. degree
in Defence and Strategic Studies from the Nigerian Defence Academy,
Kaduna. Samuel is currently a doctoral candidate in Defence and Strategic
Studies at the Nigerian Defence Academy, Kaduna and has published in
several peer-reviewed platforms. His area of scholarly interests includes
security and strategic studies, gender, environmental politics, and peace
and conflict studies.
Bashir Bala is a Captain in the Nigerian Army. A graduate of the Nige-
rian Defence Academy, Capt. Bala was commissioned at the Royal Mili-
tary Academy Sandhurst, United Kingdom, and thereafter attended Shiji-
azhuang Mechanised Infantry Academy for Basic and Advanced Special
Operations Courses in China. He was formerly a tactical commander in
several critical Counter-Insurgency Operations in the Northeast Region of
Nigeria. His is co-author (with Prof. Usman Tar) of New Architecture for
Regional Security in Africa: Counter-Terrorism and Counter-Insurgency
in the Lake Chad Basin (Lexington Books, Lanham MD, USA, 2020).
Captain Bala is a doctoral candidate at the Security and Strategy Institute,
University of Exeter, United Kingdom. His doctoral research is titled:
The Role of the Armed Forces of Nigeria in Providing Security Support to

xiii
xiv NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

Transnational Oil Companies, and Its Effects on Nigerian Defence and


Economic Security.
Ibrahim Bangura has worked extensively in the fields of Disarmament,
Demobilisation and Reintegration of Ex-Combatants, Security Sector
Reform, Sustainable Livelihoods, Gender and Conflict Resolution in
Africa. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science and History and
a Master’s degree in Gender Studies from University of Sierra Leone;
another Master’s degree in International Development Studies from the
University of Amsterdam; and a Doctorate degree in Economics from the
Leipzig Graduate School of Management in Germany. He currently works
as an independent consultant and also lectures at the Peace and Conflict
Studies Programme, Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone.
Redie Bereketeab, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Sociology and
currently works as a Senior Researcher at the Nordic Africa Institute,
Uppsala, Sweden, where he spearheads research projects on (i) conflict
and state-building in the Horn of Africa (Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia,
Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti); and (ii) the role of regional economic
communities (RECs) in peacebuilding in Africa (AMU, ECCASS,
ECOWAS, IGAD and SADC). His areas of research interest are political
sociology, development, peace and conflict studies, state-building, nation-
building, identity, democracy and governance in Africa. He has authored
several books, book chapters and articles in referred journals published by
Routledge, James Currey, Pluto Books, Palgrave Macmillan and The Red
Sea Press. Among the journals where his articles have been published in
include Studies of Ethnicity and Nationalism, African Studies, Journal of
Civil Society, African Studies, African Studies Review, African and Asian
Studies, and South African Journal of International Affairs.
Asebe Regassa Debelo is an Associate Professor at Dilla University,
Ethiopia and was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Zürich,
Switzerland (2015–2016). Dr. Debelo has also served as Director
Research and Dissemination office, Dilla University. He extensively
published papers on various themes including the high-modernist
developmentalism, land grabbing, indigenous peoples’ right, conflict
and peacebuilding and Africa–China relations in peace and security.
Dr. Debelo’s research interest includes indigenous peoples’ right to
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xv

resources, large-scale development projects and impacts on indige-


nous peoples, nature–culture relations and peacebuilding with specific
geographical areas on Eastern Africa.
Hilde Geens (Belgium) is a Programm and Policy Officer for a medical
NGO Artsen Zonder Vakantie. She is interested in development cooper-
ation, capacity development, societal change and resistance in developing
countries.
Hamdy A. Hassan, Ph.D. is a Professor of Political Science at the
College of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zayed University in Dubai.
He is also a member of the advisory board of the Swedish Network of
Peace, Conflict and Development Research. In 1999, Professor Hassan
was granted the Egyptian State award in Political Science for his book
Issues in the African Political Systems published by the Center for African
Future Studies, Cairo. From 2001 to 2005, Professor Hassan served as
an elect Vice President of the African Association of Political Science
(AAPS), based in Pretoria, South Africa. He is the founder and Director
of the Centre for African Future Studies, Cairo, since 1996. From 1999
to 2000, he served as a Director of the UNESCO Human Rights Chair
located in Jordan. His research focuses on democratisation and devel-
opment in Africa and the Arab world, Islamic Discourse in Africa and
Conflict management. He has published many books and journal arti-
cles in both Arabic and English, including Hassan, H. et al. (2018) The
Road of Soft Power: UAE and Africa. Abu Dhabi: Abu Dhabi Tourism
and Culture Department; and, Hassan, H. (2018) “The Security and
Military Relations Between UAE and Egypt.” In Hassanein Ali (ed.) The
UAE—Egyptian Relationship. Sharjah: Gulf Centre for Studies.
Joseph Lansana Kormoh is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of
History and African Studies at Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra
Leone and also a Commonwealth Scholar at the University of Bradford.
He led the teaching of general African history and the history of the
United States for more than a decade before he relocated to the UK for
his Ph.D. studies in Peace Studies at the University of Bradford. Joseph
holds a Postgraduate Diploma in Research Methods from the University
of Bradford and presently works as a UK-based freelance researcher. He
completed his undergraduate studies at the Fourah Bay College, Univer-
sity of Sierra Leone where he graduated with a B.A. (Hons.) degree in
History and later obtained an M.A. degree in History from the same
xvi NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

University. Since his graduation, Joseph has been involved in university


teaching, research and consulting for the government of Sierra Leone and
international organisations such as the UNDP. He has also been hugely
involved in the formation and training of Catholic priests at the St. Paul’s
major seminary in Sierra Leone. His book chapters have been published
by Palgrave Macmillan and Routledge and he has also published a book
with Arthur House UK, among other reputable publishing houses. In
2008, Joseph was a visiting scholar at the New York University (NYU)
during which he held a series of seminars in various universities in the
USA.
Anne Kubai is Associate Professor of World Christianity and Interreli-
gious Studies. Currently, she is a researcher at the School for Historical
and Contemporary Studies at Södertörn University, Sweden. Kubai is also
a research associate at the Research Institute for Theology and Religion
(RITR) at the University of South Africa, Pretoria. Kubai is a visiting
professor at the Institute for Women and Gender Studies at Egerton
University, Kenya. Her research interests include genocide, mass violence,
religion in peace and conflict, gender-based violence, transitional justice,
international migration, applied development and psychosocial studies.
In addition, she has a keen interest in the humanitarian-development-
peacebuilding nexus. Kubai worked with different universities and organ-
isations in Kenya and Rwanda for many years. She worked as Research
Director for Life & Peace Institute, an International Ecumenical Centre
for Peace Research and Action in Uppsala, Sweden. Kubai also worked as
Senior Social Scientist at the Division of Global Health (IHCAR), Depart-
ment of Public Health Sciences at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm,
Sweden. Until recently she was a researcher at the Centre for Multidisci-
plinary Research on Racism (CEMFOR) at the Department of Theology,
Uppsala University. Kubai has published numerous peer-reviewed journal
articles, contributions to anthologies, co-edited anthologies, research
reports, popular science articles and two documentaries.
Temitope J. Laniran earned a B.Sc. degree in Economics from Bowen
University Iwo in Nigeria and M.Sc. and PhD in Economics and Devel-
opment Studies from the Bradford Centre for International Development
(BCID), University of Bradford. During his M.Sc. degree course, Temi-
tope was awarded an Erasmus grant of the European Union Lifelong
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xvii

Learning programme to study Human Development and Food Secu-


rity at the Roma Tre Universita Degli Studi Rome, Italy. He has previ-
ously worked with the Centre for Petroleum, Energy Economics and Law,
(CPEEL) at the University of Ibadan, as well as Equilibra Consulting—
both in Nigeria. He currently teaches Economics at the University of
Bradford and was previously a Research Associate at the University’s John
and Elnora Fergusson Centre for African Studies. His research interest
is focused on economic growth and development issues of resource-rich
countries and fragile states.
Nolubabalo Lulu Magam, Ph.D. holds an undergraduate degree in
Peace Studies, a Master’s in International Relations from the North-West
University (South Africa) and a Ph.D. in International Relations from
the University of KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa). Nolubabalo is a Political
Science and Conflict Transformation and Peace studies Lecturer at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal and has taught Political Science and Inter-
national Relations at the University of Pretoria and North-West University
in South Africa. She has published in the area of alternative energy and
climate change adaptation as a means to peace and security, as well as
immigration policies in South Africa. Her current research interest is in
exploring the potential of paradiplomacy in Africa’s development, which
derives from his doctoral research.
Uchenna A. Nnamani is an early career development economist with
strong interest in development finance. He desires a career in development
researcher and practice. Nnamani is currently a Ph.D. degree candidate
at the Institute for Development Studies, University of Nigeria (Enugu
Campus). He holds a Master’s degree in Development Studies, and a
Bachelor of Science degree in Economics. Nnamani has been working
with the Development Strategy Centre (a Nigerian-based research think
tank) since 2015. Working with the think tank while doing his Ph.D.
research has helped him gain reasonable research experience in the
area of international finance, trade, policy analysis and impact assess-
ment. His experience in international finance includes being part of an
AERC-funded research project titled “Asymmetric Shocks, Real Exchange
Rate Distortions and Options for the Second Monetary Zone in West
Africa.” Nnamani has presented papers at International Conferences, and
workshops of African Economic Research Consortium.
xviii NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

Aymar Nyenyezi Bisoka is currently a lecturer and postdoctoral


researcher. He earned his Ph.D. degree from the School of Political and
Social Sciences of the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, with a
background in legal and political studies. His postdoctoral researches
focus on issues of power and resistance in relation to access to natural
resources in the Great Lakes Region. Nyenyezi is involved in teaching and
coordinating research-action projects in Belgium (UCLouvain), Burundi
(University of Burundi), DRC (Catholic University of Bukavu and the
Higher Institute of Rural Development) and Rwanda.
Abdullahi Mohammed Odowa is the Ambassador of the Federal
Government of Somalia to the State of Kuwait, and a doctoral candi-
date at the Africa Programme of the United Nations-Mandated Univer-
sity for Peace in Costa Rica. Previously, Ambassador Odowa worked as
a Senior Political Advisor to the Office of the Prime Minister of the
Federal Government of Somalia, General-Director of Somali Observa-
tory of Conflict and Violence Prevention (OCVP), and the Director
of Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) at the University of
Hargeisa in Somalia. Ambassador Odowa holds a Bachelor’s degree in
Human Anatomy from the University of Maiduguri in Nigeria, M.A.
in Natural Resources and Peace from the United Nations Mandated
University for Peace in Costa Rica, and M.A. in Peacebuilding from the
Centre of Trust, Peace and Social Relations at Coventry University in
the United Kingdom. Prior to his appointment to lead the Somali Diplo-
matic Mission to the State of Kuwait, Ambassador Odowa developed and
implemented numerous field research projects on issues of security, peace-
building, governance and development in the Somali regions with support
from major international development partners and academic institutions.
His current areas of research interest include traditional peacebuilding,
state-building and security governance in the Horn of Africa.
Kenneth Omeje is Director, Manifold Crown Consulting in Bradford,
UK; Visiting Professor at the Institute for Peace and Security Studies
(IPSS) in Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia; and Visiting Professorial
Fellow at the Nigerian Defence Academy in Kaduna, Nigeria. He has
previously held the positions of Professor of International Relations at the
United States International University in Nairobi, Kenya; Senior Research
Fellow at the John and Elnora Ferguson Centre for African Studies,
University of Bradford, UK and Senior Research Associate at the Univer-
sity of Johannesburg, South Africa. Kenneth is the author of Peacebuilding
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xix

in Contemporary Africa: In Search of Alternative Strategies (edited,


London: Routledge, 2019), The Crises of Postcoloniality in Africa (edited,
Dakar: CODESRIA, 2015), Conflict and Peacebuilding in the African
Great Lakes Region (co. ed. Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2013),
High Stakes and Stakeholders: Oil Conflict & Security in Nigeria (Alder-
shot: Ashgate, 2006); etc. He has more than 90 publications, including
books, book chapters, contributions to international encyclopedias and
articles in well-regarded journals. Kenneth has previously held visiting
research fellowship positions at the Centre for African Studies, Univer-
sity of Florida, Gainesville, USA (Spring, 1992); Law Department, Keele
University, UK (Spring, 2000); Institute of Higher Education, Compre-
hensive University of Kassel, Germany (Summer, 2000); Department of
International Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth (Spring, 2001);
and Georg Eckert Institute (GEI) in Braunschweig, Germany (Autumn
2014). He is a Fellow of the West Africa Institute (WAI) in Praia, Cape
Verde and a member of the Advisory Board of the African Peacebuilding
Network (APN) of the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) of New
York.
Onyukwu E. Onyukwu is a Development Economist and thorough-
bred academic with over twenty-five years of professional experience. He
was formerly the Head of the Department of Economics, University of
Nigeria, Nsukka. He is an alumnus of the Cambridge University Advanced
Programme on Rethinking Development Economics (CAPORDE). He
has taught Development Economics at both undergraduate and post-
graduate levels among other undergraduate courses for several years.
He is a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Development Studies (IDS)
of the same University where he teaches graduate courses in theories
of development and development policy, as well as supervises Master’s
and Doctoral students’ theses. He is a development policy expert and
professional trainer. His professional experiences cut across organisational
capacity development, policy research and advocacy capacity building,
strategy development, performance monitoring and evaluation, organisa-
tional assessment, governance research designs and implementation. He
has done extensive evaluation work in the area of public expenditures
and public policy development. For many years, he has been engaged in
grassroots community advocacy and sensitisation activities for various civil
society network organisations. He has held several short-term consultancy
positions funded by different international organisations such as DFID,
xx NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

UNDP, USAID-DAI and the World Bank, and also different government
institutions in Nigeria, including the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
Taiwo Owoeye, Ph.D. is a 2018 grantee of the African Peacebuilding
Network (APN) of the New York-based Social Science Research Council
(SSRC). He is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Economics, Ekiti
State University, Ado-Ekiti, Nigeria. He is an Alumnus of the American
Political Science Association (APSA) African Methodological Workshop
2013. He was also a co-recipient of 2014 American Political Science Asso-
ciation Methodological Workshop Alumni Networking Grant. Taiwo’s
research interest is in how politics, institutions and history drive economic
decisions in Africa. His publications have appeared in diverse reputable
journals.
Sabastiano Rwengabo is a Ugandan Political Scientist and Independent
Consultant in the areas of Fragility and Resilience Assessments, Polit-
ical Economy Analyses and Institutional Assessments. He is a Country
Expert with the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Project of the Depart-
ment of Political Science, University of Gothenburg. He was formerly
a Research Fellow with the Advocates Coalition for Development and
Environment (ACODE), a Kampala-based regional policy research and
advocacy think tank. He completed the History Makers Training (HMT)
and Oakseed Executive Leadership Course (OELC) with the Institute for
National Transformation (INT). Dr. Rwengabo holds a Ph.D. degree
from the National University of Singapore (NUS), where he was a
Research Scholar, President’s Graduate Fellow and Graduate Teacher,
2010–2014. His scholarly interest focuses on areas of International Poli-
tics and Security, Regionalism, Civil—Military Relations (CMR), Post-
Conflict Transformation and Democratisation. One of Dr. Rwengabo’s
latest research products is a book on Security Cooperation in the East
African Community (Trenton, New Jersey: African World Press, 2018).
Usman A. Tar (Ph.D.) is Endowed Professor of Defence and Security
Studies at the Nigerian Defence Academy, and Director of the Academy’s
flagship Centre for Defence Studies and Documentation (CDSD). Prof
Tar has held professional academic positions in Africa, United Kingdom
and the Republic of Iraq. He is a Member of the Board of Social Science
Research Council’s African Peacebuilding Network (SSRC/APN), New
York, USA. He has previously held the positions of Associate Research
Fellow at the John and Elnora Ferguson Centre for Africa Studies
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xxi

(JEFCAS) at the University of Bradford, and Assistant Professor at the


Department of Politics and International Relations and Director of Post-
graduate Studies at the University of Kurdistan-Hewler, Northern Iraq.
Prof. Tar is the author of The Politics of Neoliberal Democracy in Africa
(London/New York: I.B. Tauris, 2009); Globalization in Africa: Perspec-
tives on Development, Security, and the Environment (Lexington Books,
Lanham MD, USA, 2016); Defence Transformation and the Consoli-
dation of Democracy in Nigeria (Kaduna: Academy Publishers, 2018);
New Architecture for Regional Security in Africa: Counter-Terrorism and
Counter-Insurgency in the Lake Chad Basin (Lexington Books, Lanham
MD, USA, 2020), and the Routledge Handbook of Counter-Terrorism and
Counter-Insurgency in Africa (Routledge, forthcoming, Autumn 2020).
Prof. Tar was a member of Presidential Committee to Review Nigeria’s
National Defence Policy (2014–2015) and currently sits on the High-
Powered Ministerial Think Tank established by Nigeria’s Federal Ministry
of Defence to monitor and review threats to national security in Nigeria.
Prof. Tar has consulted for the Westminster Foundation for Democ-
racy (WFD, Nigeria), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP,
Nigeria), United States Institute for Peace (Nigeria Office) and Konrad
Adaneur Stiftung (German Development Fund, Nigeria). He also serves
as visiting professor and external examiner to several institutions of higher
learning in Nigeria.
Yohannes Tekalign earned a B.A. degree in Political Science and Inter-
national Relations, and Master’s and Ph.D. degrees in Peace and Security
Studies from Addis Ababa University. He has over ten years’ experience
in teaching and research in Ethiopia’s higher education institutions. His
research focus is on regional peace, conflict and security. Presently, Dr.
Yohannes is an Assistant Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at the
Federal Meles Zenawi Leadership Academy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Abbreviations

ACAs Anti-Corruption Agencies


ACP African, Caribbean and Pacific
AfCFTA African Continental Free Trade Area
AfDB African Development Bank
AFRICOM Africa Command
AGOA African Growth Opportunity Act
AMU Arab Maghreb Union
APF African Peace Facility
APSA African Peace and Security Architecture
AQAP Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
AQIM Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
ARII Africa Regional Integration Index
ASF African Standby Force
ATA Agricultural Transformation Agenda
AU African Union
AUPSC Africa Union Peace and Security Council
BHTs Boko Haram Terrorists
BOA Bank of Agriculture
BOI Bank of Industry
CAADP Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme
CADSP Common African Defence and Security Policy
CEN-SAD Community of Sahel-Saharan States
CET Common External Tariff
CFA Communauté Financière Africaine
COMESA Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa
CPI Corruption Perception Index

xxiii
Another random document with
no related content on Scribd:
medical biographies. $15 Norman, Remington co.
926

20–14756

To a certain extent this work is a revision of Dr Kelly’s “Cyclopedia


of American medical biography,” published in 1912. He says in the
preface: “Dr Walter L. Burrage and I have worked for several years to
produce the present volume, deleting from the former book fifty-one
biographies not coming up to our standard, replacing with new
biographies sixty-two others, revising and correcting from original
sources nearly all, and adding 815 new ones, besides those that have
replaced the old ones. Thus our book contains 1948 biographies and
is carried through the year 1918. In addition there are about eighty
references to individuals mentioned biographically in the main
biographies.” The principle of selection has been “to include every
man who has in any way contributed to the advancement of medicine
in the United States or in Canada, or who, being a physician, has
become illustrious in some other field of general science or in
literature.” Living men are entirely excluded. A list of works
consulted occupies nine pages and there is a local index, by states, in
addition to the general index.

“The catholicity of judgment shown in their preparation and the


discrimination in the selection of names chosen for reference place
‘American medical biographies’ on a very high plane indeed.” Van
Buren Thorne

+ N Y Times p14 O 31 ’20 2500w


KELLY, THOMAS HOWARD. What outfit,
Buddy? il *$1.50 (3c) Harper

20–3794

As this narrative stands it is Jimmy McGee’s story—“Jimmy


McGee, a real, regular fighting Yank who has seen his share of la
guerre”—and his story, says the author “is merely the universal
version of the great adventure as held by legions of his comrades.”
Inseparable from Jimmy is his pal the O. D., who never went back
after “la guerre finee” to his mother and Mary but left Jimmy to
break them the news of the grave in France.

+ Booklist 16:282 My ’20

“The whole volume is rather an interesting experimentation in


values which, helped by the delightful illustrations, is, on the whole a
success.” I. W. L.

+ Boston Transcript p6 Ap 14 ’20 800w

KEMP, HARRY HIBBARD. Chanteys and


ballads. *$1.50 Brentano’s 811

20–12187
“The book contains rough out-door poems of land and sea, songs
of sailors at sea driving to strange lands, and impressions of tramps
by campfire and their visions of the Christ, and many others.” (St
Louis) “Most of the sea poems were written long after Mr Kemp had
ceased to sail before the mast, but the impressions that those early
years made upon him have hardly faded.” (N Y Times)

“For those who know that splendid play Mr Kemp wrote on Judas
when he gave his version of Judas’s purpose in the betrayal will find
his poems of New Testament life full of power and a strange
loveliness. If one had a doubt as to whether Mr Kemp would finally
reach a development of his gifts where he would no longer be
accepted with qualifications, that doubt, it seems to me, vanished
with this volume.” W: S. Braithwaite

+ Boston Transcript p6 S 1 ’20 1300w


Dial 70:109 Ja ’21 40w

“One can not share Mr Kemp’s expressed conviction that he has


found ‘the immortal meaning of it all.’ At least, if he has found it, he
has not succeeded in transferring it to the assorted verses which are
gathered here.” L. B.

− Freeman 1:622 S 8 ’20 210w

“Mr Kemp’s new volume is a disappointment. He was fastidious


before, though generous enough in thought and gesture; now he
finds room for commonplace and cant, complacency and swagger.”
Mark Van Doren

− + Nation 111:sup414 O 13 ’20 100w


“Full of buoyancy and swinging rhythms.”

+ N Y Times p16 N 7 ’20 160w


St Louis 18:247 O ’20 30w

[2]
KENDALL, RALPH SELWOOD. Luck of the
mounted. *$2 Lane

20–17967

“The scene of this story is the great Canadian Northwest, the


principal part of it being laid in the vicinity of Calgary, where the
author was for a time stationed as a member of the Royal Northwest
mounted police. A particularly baffling murder case is the theme of
the tale and the culprit is a man with a strange and adventurous past.
A second killing, with a curious chain of circumstances connecting it
with the first one, is, in the end, solved and the murderer brought to
justice.”—N Y Times

“The story is devoid of romance, but it is told in such a gripping,


straightforward manner as to give it the earmarks of truth.”

+ N Y Times p20 D 5 ’20 160w

“Sergeant Kendall writes about the Royal Canadian mounted


police with inside knowledge. That makes his story more convincing
than most narratives of this type. The background of snowy
Canadian scenery, admirably painted in, lends a touch of poetry to
the tale.”
+ The Times [London] Lit Sup p801 D 2
’20 80w

KENEALY, ARABELLA. Feminism and sex-


extinction. *$5 Dutton 396

(Eng ed SG20–92)

“Dr Kenealy has elaborated the truth that men and women inherit
the characteristics of both sexes into an extreme doctrine which she
uses as a weapon to attack feminism and the ‘unwomanly woman.’
She heads a chapter, ‘One side of the body is male, the other side is
female’; and the next, ‘Masculine mothers produce emasculate sons
by misappropriating the life-potential of male offspring.’ Feminist
doctrine and practice are disastrous to human faculty and progress.
She is in dread of ‘the impending subjection of man,’ because it will
be a calamity for woman as well as for man.”—Ath

Ath p621 My 7 ’20 120w

“It is a sad spectacle to see a helpless fact writhing under the


disapproval of Dr Kenealy.” C. P. Gilman

− N Y Evening Post p7 O 30 ’20 1300w

Reviewed by E. L. Pearson

Review 3:269 S 29 ’20 140w


“The problem of physical and psychic duality is discussed at
length, and it is here that Miss Kenealy’s assumptions are seen to rest
on dubious foundations. Her hypothesis of the necessity of ‘two
modes of vital energy,’ for instance, is not fortified by facts. The
common sense view of female capabilities tallies, however, in many
instances with Miss Kenealy’s quasi-scientific postulates.”

+ − Sat R 129:436 My 8 ’20 800w

“Dr Arabella Kenealy states the case against ‘suffragetism’ and


against the masculinization of women with considerable vigour and
unquestionably with considerable truth, but it is so fatally easy to
pick holes both in her logic and in her facts that the reader will
probably find it difficult to do justice to the truth of her ideas.”

+ − Spec 125:20 Jl 3 ’20 500w

KENNARD, JOSEPH SPENCER. Goldoni and


the Venice of his time. il *$6 Macmillan 852

20–8020

Goldoni, the famous Italian playwright, 1707–1793, is an


impersonation of the Italian modern character, says the author of the
present volume. “In him, Italians are pleased to see ... an idealised
image of themselves ... humanized by touches that endear it both to
those who trace out of it a resemblance to their own soul, and to
those who, across his charming personality, are desirous to
comprehend the soul of modern Italy.” Much of the material of the
book is taken from Goldoni’s Memoirs. Beginning with a
chronological summary of his life, a bibliography and a list of his
plays, the first chapter is devoted to the historical and literary
background of Goldoni’s life and work, the five following chapters to
the life itself, six chapters to the plays and the conclusion to a general
appreciation. The book has an index and three illustrations.

Ath p266 Ag 27 ’20 2150w


+ Booklist 17:62 N ’20

“He has succeeded in presenting a human and sympathetic person,


not obscuring his faults or exaggerating his virtues.... Mr Kennard’s
book is entertaining, but it abounds in misprints, especially in the
French and Italian citations.” N. H. D.

+ − Boston Transcript p4 Je 2 ’20 900w

“It is a painstaking, if somewhat loosely discursive production.”

+ Nation 111:511 N 3 ’20 250w

“It will win a place as an excellent biography, constructed in a


workmanlike manner and written in an easy, enjoyable style.”

+ N Y Times p16 N 7 ’20 720w


R of Rs 62:112 Jl ’20 60w
+ Spec 125:476 O 9 ’20 180w
+ Springf’d Republican p7a N 21 ’20 350w
+ The Times [London] Lit Sup p547 Ag
26 ’20 1250w

KENNARD, JOSEPH SPENCER. Memmo. *$2


(2c) Doran

20–19583

The story is one of love and crime in modern Italy, but true to old
traditions. Daniele Sparnieri, an upstart Jew, steeped in all iniquity,
from illicit amours with women to criminal grasping in finance,
murders an already dying relative and steals his will. Thus enabled to
disinherit and make an outcast of the old man’s grandson, Memmo,
he makes himself the head of the Sparnieri banking firm and Clara,
the old man’s granddaughter, and in reality Daniele’s illicit daughter,
the greatest heiress in Venice. He separates Clara from her cousin,
Memmo, whom she loves and forces her to marry a profligate and
impoverished member of the oldest aristocracy of Venice. Later he
causes Memmo’s imprisonment on a criminal charge of bomb
throwing, but when nemesis overtakes him in the vengeance of his
numerous victims, and the dying Count D’Abbie, Clara’s husband,
confesses Memmo’s innocence, true love comes to its own.

“The style is adequate—that is, it maintains a sense of suspense, an


essential in a story of this nature—and with its fair proportion of
properly used adjectives brings to the reader the atmosphere of
modern Italy.”

+ N Y Evening Post p17 D 4 ’20 90w


“Not the least interesting feature of the narration is the intimate
presentation of various picturesque Jewish customs maintained by
the orthodox from the days of Moses. The book will appeal to lovers
of well-written sensational fiction. And certainly the author does
know his Venice.”

+ N Y Times p27 Ja 2 ’21 470w

KENNEDY, CHARLES RANN. Army with


banners; a divine comedy of this very day, in five
acts, scene individable, setting forth the story of a
morning in the early millennium. *$1.50 Huebsch
822

20–6980

An allegorical play of continuous action, altho arrangement is


made for division into the usual five acts. The theme is Christianity,
and among the characters are Mary Bliss, a woman of simple faith
who grows steadily younger as the play progresses until she passes
from age to radiant girlhood, and Tommy Trail, a revivalist of the
Billy Sunday type, determined to save her soul. The others, with the
exception of Dafty, also a symbolic figure, represent various types of
worldliness.

Booklist 16:271 My ’20


Nation 110:435 Ap 3 ’20 260w
“Its spirit is beautiful and profoundly right. But its method is that
of allegory gone mad, jumbling touches of realism with the maddest
fantasy, so it is perplexing and ineffective even to read, and, in the
theater, quite hopeless.” W. P. Eaton

− + N Y Call p10 Ap 18 ’20 520w

“There are greater achievements doubtless in the world of drama


than Mr Charles Rann Kennedy’s ‘Army with banners’ but one
doubts if there are greater exploits. It blends incongruities and
actualizes fantasies in a manner that allows no rest and sets no
bound to admiration. As a play it is far from exemplary. It is long and
its action is naught, and the culmination has the effect of being
prostrated by the fatigues of its journey.”

− + Review 2:400 Ap 17 ’20 380w

“In ‘The army with banners’ one finds an art so completely


intellectual that one’s interest, trained to emotion and sentiment,
falters at times: the high finish, brilliant and sustained as it is, is
brittle almost to the cracking-point. Of plot—well, Mr Kennedy
would never be passed by Professor Baker, and this reviewer has a
suspicion that a bit of concession to story-interest would have helped
over the two or three undeniably dull spots in the book.”

+ − Theatre Arts Magazine 4:255 Jl ’20


380w

[2]
KENNEDY, HARRY ANGUS ALEXANDER.
Theology of the Epistles. (Studies in theology) *$1.35
Scribner 230
20–15157

“One of a new series of aids to interpretation and Biblical criticism


for students, the clergy, and laymen. Dr Kennedy’s book is divided
into three parts, the first of which relates to Paulinism. The second
part deals with phases of early Christian thought in the main
independent of Paulinism. In the third part the author discusses the
theology of the developing church.”—Ath

Ath p1016 O 10 ’19 60w

“There is a useful bibliography and the indexing is thorough. The


treatment of the theology of Paul is excellent.”

+ Bib World 54:644 N ’20 240w

KENT, CHARLES FOSTER, and JENKS,


JEREMIAH WHIPPLE. Jesus’ principles of living.
(Bible’s message to modern life) *$1.25 Scribner 232

20–12830

“In the words of the authors, ‘the aim in this volume has been to
interpret the teachings of Jesus frankly, simply, and constructively in
the light of modern conditions, and to make clear the trail that Jesus
blazed by which each man may find the larger life in union and
coöperation with the eternal source of all life.’ The two distinguished
university professors, one in Biblical study and the other in political
science, have worked together to expound the teachings of Jesus to
our modern world. They have seen that ‘a yearning for social justice,
for brotherhood, and for spiritual satisfaction filled the hearts of
men’ in the first century, and that the present century manifests the
same yearning.”—Boston Transcript

“Any teacher looking for a textbook for a Bible class should see this
volume.”

+ Bib World 54:649 N ’20 180w

“The authors are singularly free from those obsessions of so many


theologians and political scientists, the fallacies of the universal and
of the abstract.” F. W. C.

+ Boston Transcript p8 S 15 ’20 470w

“The book abounds in beautiful platitudes.”

− Cath World 112:257 N ’20 100w

“Certain aspects of the subject are treated in many cases without


sufficient recognition of such real conflicts of responsibility as are
involved in modern social relationships. Nevertheless, the book is
thoroughly wholesome in essentials and promotes thought in the
reader.” B. L.

+ − Survey 45:104 O 16 ’20 210w


KENT, ROCKWELL. Wilderness; a journal of
quiet adventure in Alaska. il *$5 Putnam

20–6728

Rockwell Kent is an artist who spent one autumn and winter on an


island in Resurrection bay, Kenai peninsula, Alaska, in company with
his nine year old son. Since his return he has exhibited the paintings
that are the fruit of those months. This book, published with an
introduction by Dorothy Canfield and illustrations from the author’s
drawings, is a record of “quiet adventure,” telling of the daily life of
the two, father and son, with their one companion Olson,—a perfect
companion for great solitudes. Of what the experience meant to both
man and boy, the artist writes, “It seems that we have both together
by chance turned out of the beaten, crowded way and come to stand
face to face with that infinite and unfathomable thing which is the
wilderness; and here we have found ourselves—for the wilderness is
nothing else. It is a kind of living mirror that gives back as its own all
and only all that the imagination of a man brings to it. It is that
which we believe it to be.”

“Mr Kent’s journal makes pleasant and easy reading; but it is


obvious enough that the letterpress in this rich volume is little more
than an excuse for the drawings. It is as a pictorial artist that Mr
Kent asks for criticism and admiration, not as a writer. If Blake had
never lived, the art of Rockwell Kent would not have been what it is.
All of Blake that can be made into a convention he has
conventionalized. But when we look for the force that can turn a
convention into living art, we look almost in vain.” A. L. H.

+ − Ath p172 Ag 6 ’20 650w


+ Booklist 16:309 Je ’20
Reviewed by H: McBride

Dial 69:91 Jl ’20 800w

“The result of their year at Fox Island is the startlingly beautiful


series of drawings reproduced in the text and the ‘Journal of quiet
adventure’ itself, an important event for many reasons but perhaps
chiefly for its unparalleled record of a year of perfect happiness and
freedom in the life of a child.” Martha Gruening

+ Freeman 1:165 Ap 28 ’20 550w

“To what can we compare this very beautiful and poignant record
of one of the most unusual adventures ever chronicled? It is not like
‘Walden,’ it is not like any other diary of experiences in the
wilderness.” M. F. Egan

+ N Y Times 25:285 My 30 ’20 120w

“The present reviewer has no intention of suggesting that


‘Wilderness’ is preeminently a book for boys, but that it may be
popular with boys is not a mere surmise.”

+ Outlook 125:506 Jl 14 ’20 850w


R of Rs 61:559 My ’20 80w

“Rather an unusual book in both appearance and contents is


‘Wilderness.’”

+ Springf’d Republican p8 Jl 8 ’20 500w


“The writing is well enough, but Mr Kent is not a born writer; he is
a born, though very unequal draughtsman.”

+ − The Times [London] Lit Sup p469 Jl 22


’20 1000w

KEON, GRACE. Just Happy. *$1.65 Devin-Adair

20–5124

“Happy is the name of the canine hero, a huge and hideous black
bulldog and an invincible fighter. Happy’s nature was of the best; in
fact, his temper could not truthfully be called anything less than
saintly, but he was a ferocious looking animal, so amazingly and
abnormally hideous that Mother was shocked at the sight of him and
felt that she really could not take him into her household of six small
boys and Father—Father being in truth the veriest boy of them all. Of
course, Mother yielded at last to the importunities of Father,
Grandmother and the boys. Happy became a member of the family,
and quickly proved himself a most valuable one. Happy routs a
thievish tramp, comforts a dying old soldier’s last hours, has a fight
with another dog, which encounter narrowly escapes being an
expensive one for Father, and saves the house from burglars.”—N Y
Times

“Delightful is the one adjective that best describes the book.”

+ Boston Transcript p9 My 8 ’20 120w


“Told agreeably, with humor as well as sentiment.”

+ Cath World 111:696 Ag ’20 120w

“Nice little story which will probably please dog lovers.”

+ N Y Times 25:329 Je 20 ’20 500w

KEPPEL, FREDERICK PAUL. Some war-time


lessons. *$1.50 (7½c) Columbia univ. press 940.373

20–3590

Three lectures by the third assistant secretary of war, the first


delivered at the General theological seminary, the second at
Columbia, and the third at Michigan university. Contents: The
American soldier and his standards of conduct; The war as a
practical test of American scholarship; What have we learned?

Nation 111:305 S 11 ’20 150w

KERLIN, ROBERT THOMAS. Voice of the


nero, 1919. il *$2.50 Dutton 326.1

20–13602
“What the negroes are now thinking, saying, and doing, as
reflected in their press, is shown in this volume, ‘The voice of the
negro,’ by Professor Robert T. Kerlin, of the Virginia Military
institute. Nearly the whole of the book consists of clippings, with just
enough explanatory matter to give them a proper setting. It is a
digest of negro opinion on the aftermath of the war, labor unionism
and radicalism, riots, lynchings, exploitation and exclusion from the
franchise, along with a brief summary of the race’s recent progress in
education and industry. Notable, as might be expected, is the volume
of protest against the treatment the negro soldier has received
following a war to make the world safe for democracy—a war in
which he bore so wholly creditable a part.”—Review

Booklist 17:53 N ’20

“Readers will find this book to be a great clarifier of ideas.”

+ Freeman 2:262 N 24 ’20 400w

“It is not pleasant reading, but useful, in that it shows the negro’s
growth in self respect, and that it is a frightful and unanswerable
indictment of the American people who suffer these wrongs to exist,
not only without effective protest but largely with their
acquiescence.” E. A. S.

+ Grinnell R 16:309 D ’20 260w

“Few white Americans but will be astonished, perhaps, at the


volume and the eloquence of that voice as here reported with
praiseworthy fairness; still fewer, doubtless, but will wonder at the
shrewdness with which these negro editors survey the problems of
their race.”

+ Nation 111:736 D 22 ’20 120w

“The book should be read by every one interested in the welfare of


the country and in the cause of justice.” Clement Wood

+ N Y Call p7 Ja 9 ’21 170w

“Whoever thinks that the negro is not foully abused will find
Professor Kerlin’s book wholesome, though unpleasant, reading.”

+ No Am 212:575 O ’20 300w

“A valuable volume for the study of the negro question in America.


Typographically the book is not attractive.”

+ Outlook 126:690 D 15 ’20 100w

“A most interesting and worth-while volume.”

+ Review 3:538 D 1 ’20 300w

“The excerpts presented do not all rank equally in weight of


thought or of rhetoric. But they are symptomatic and in that respect
the compilation is invaluable since it points the finger of warning. If
instead of appointing a committee of a hundred and more to
investigate the wrongs of Ireland we should establish a commission
to investigate honestly and diligently the causes underlying this
composite of fire and bitterness, a great and overshadowing disaster
might be peacably turned aside.” Jessie Fauset

+ Survey 45:547 Ja 8 ’21 260w

KERNAHAN, COULSON. Spiritualism; a


personal experience and a warning. *60c (7½c)
Revell 134

20–17391

Spiritualism is an obsession, says the author, by which a person


relinquishes his will-power into other and unknown hands—always a
very dangerous thing to do. He believes that any attempt to unlock
the door which separates this life from the next is “an unseemly
intrusion upon the sanctity, the august majesty, of which we are
conscious in the presence of our dead. Spiritualism vulgarizes that
which is holy, while adding to our knowledge no single word of real
help or worth.” Contents: Spiritual housebreaking; A personal
experience; Some comments on my first séance; Telepathy; The
barrenness of spiritualism; Sin begins in want of faith; A will o’ the
wisp.

“The description of his own experience at a séance is certainly


interesting, but as usual in such narratives, too vague in its details.”

+ − Ath p93 Ja 16 ’20 50w


+ N Y Times 25:19 Jl 4 ’20 80w
+ Springf’d Republican p6 Je 1 ’20 300w
The Times [London] Lit Sup p635 N 6
’19 60w

KERNAHAN, COULSON. Swinburne as I knew


him. *$1.25 (4½c) Lane

20–8544

This second installment of the author’s recollections of Swinburne


—the first appeared in “In good company”—contains some hitherto
unpublished letters from the poet to his cousin, the Hon. Lady
Henniker Heaton. After Mr Gosse’s “Life and letters of Swinburne,”
the author of the present volume considers reserve no longer
necessary and has therefore written more freely than in his first
volume. Contents: Letters from A. C. Swinburne to his cousin; The
story of a dear deceit; “Oh, those poets!”; George Borrow in a frock-
coat; “In the days of our youth”; Philip Marston’s “Hush!” story; A. C.
S. and R. L. S.; The laureateship—a cartoon in the Pall Mall Gazette—
and some woman poets whose work Swinburne admired; A sonnet in
the Athenæum and more “dear deceit”; “Puck of Putney hill”; A
paragraph in the Westminster Gazette; “All my memories of him are
glad and gracious memories.”

Ath p1275 N 28 ’19 40w


+ Booklist 17:29 O ’20

Reviewed by R. M. Weaver

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