The Inevitability of Corruption in Africa (PDF)
(Sprache: Englisch)
Essay from the year 2017 in the subject African Studies - Culture and Applied Geography, grade: A, , language: English, abstract: This essay deals with corruption and its inevitability in Africa. It argues that this devastating phenomena will not end...
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Essay from the year 2017 in the subject African Studies - Culture and Applied Geography, grade: A, , language: English, abstract: This essay deals with corruption and its inevitability in Africa. It argues that this devastating phenomena will not end because it is embedded in our political system and in the leaders that are supposed to stop it.
The famous saying still linger. "An apple does not fall too far away from the tree" and "no tree grows without its roots", so everything that has grown, it surely have its own roots from where it comes from, which are the basis and strength of such a thing, with a stem from the roots, to the branches and finally the fruits or whatever products such a tree is bound to bear, either positive or negative, good or bad, sweet or sour, harmful or not harmful.
This is exactly how corruption is. No one knows what a tree is going to bare or produce, just like corruption, if it's going to be good or bad, harmful or not harmful. After colonialism, different people, countries followed the evil practices of exploiting government for their personal gains just like the colonial leaders used to use state resources to build their home country (as its widely accepted that the West got rich at the expense of African people).
They did without knowing the negative impacts it might or does or would have on the people and the leaders themselves. During colonialism, people in African countries fought together as a collective unit, not only for themselves but for their countries, the lifeline and livelihood for themselves and that of their own countries, the land and its resources, mineral resources etc.
Nowadays, the collectivism has effectively disappeared and has been replaced by individualism, selfishness, nepotism and the mentality of "every man for himself", which above all disadvantages the poor, the unemployed people, and fail to take into consideration the youth and also disabled people or people in rural areas. The mentality of "every man for himself" or liberalism itself is the greatest fertilizer of conflict.
The famous saying still linger. "An apple does not fall too far away from the tree" and "no tree grows without its roots", so everything that has grown, it surely have its own roots from where it comes from, which are the basis and strength of such a thing, with a stem from the roots, to the branches and finally the fruits or whatever products such a tree is bound to bear, either positive or negative, good or bad, sweet or sour, harmful or not harmful.
This is exactly how corruption is. No one knows what a tree is going to bare or produce, just like corruption, if it's going to be good or bad, harmful or not harmful. After colonialism, different people, countries followed the evil practices of exploiting government for their personal gains just like the colonial leaders used to use state resources to build their home country (as its widely accepted that the West got rich at the expense of African people).
They did without knowing the negative impacts it might or does or would have on the people and the leaders themselves. During colonialism, people in African countries fought together as a collective unit, not only for themselves but for their countries, the lifeline and livelihood for themselves and that of their own countries, the land and its resources, mineral resources etc.
Nowadays, the collectivism has effectively disappeared and has been replaced by individualism, selfishness, nepotism and the mentality of "every man for himself", which above all disadvantages the poor, the unemployed people, and fail to take into consideration the youth and also disabled people or people in rural areas. The mentality of "every man for himself" or liberalism itself is the greatest fertilizer of conflict.
Autoren-Porträt von Joseph Nangombe Tobias Tobias
Joseph NM TobiasJoseph is a graduate of the University of Namibia, he earned a Bachelor of Public Management back in 2016, he is also an alumni of Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), a program aimed at training future young African leaders to be agents of change in their home countries. He has participated in the AU Model Summit of 2014 hosted by the University of Namibia; he has completed a six month Diploma in Business Management with Amity University (India). He is currently in his final year of Master of Arts in Political Science. He worked as a contracted school teacher at Niigambo Combined School in the rural outskirt of Namibia. From 15 February 2018, Joseph worked in the Namibian National Assembly, Parliament as a Political Researcher and Speech Writer for the Popular Democratic Movement which is the Official Opposition party. Joseph has written well over 20 published articles in the Namibian Newspapers, the Namibian, The Sun, Windhoek Observer and the Patriot, his writing ranges from all African issues, corruption, mobility and free movement of people, african institutions, Governement systems, party politics, the state, state model, socialism, black consciousness etc. He has also participated in different essay competitions, written non-academic articles and currently in the process of publishing his first academic article. Joseph sees himself as a Social and Youth activist and advocate for the voiceless, a political analyst and a writer. In collaboration with his fellow youth, Joseph intend to establish a youth newspaper, a youth dialogue organization and an NGO focused on political and human rights education for the people in rural areas and young people, most especially in school at all levels.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Joseph Nangombe Tobias Tobias
- 2019, 1. Auflage, 9 Seiten, Englisch
- Verlag: GRIN Verlag
- ISBN-10: 3346010767
- ISBN-13: 9783346010766
- Erscheinungsdatum: 09.09.2019
Abhängig von Bildschirmgröße und eingestellter Schriftgröße kann die Seitenzahl auf Ihrem Lesegerät variieren.
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