Free Essay

Africa

In:

Submitted By suhminwoo
Words 1733
Pages 7
아프리카 개관

I. 국별 일람

국명 | 수도 | 면적(km2)) | 인구(2009년 추산) | 인구밀도(km2)) | 독립년월일 | 한국 | 서울 | 100,032 | 48,379,392 | 493 | 1945. 8. 15 | | | 한반도: 220,572제주도: 1,840 | | | | Algeria | Algiers | 2,381,741 | 34,178,188 | 14.3 | 1962. 7. 5 | Angola | Luanda | 1,246,700 | 16,941,000(2007년 기준) | 13 | 1975. 11. 11 | Benin | Porto-Novo | 112,620 | 8,791,832 | 78.0 | 1960. 8. 1 | Botswana | Gaborone | 600,370 | 1,990,876 | 3.3 | 1966. 9. 30 | Burkina Faso | Ouagadougou | 274,200 | 15,746,232 | 57.4 | 1960. 8. 5 | Burundi | Bujumbura | 27,830 | 8,988,091 | 322.9 | 1962. 7. 1 | Cameroon | Yaoundé | 475,440 | 18,879,301 | 39.7 | 1960. 1. 1 | Cape Verde | Praia | 4,033 | 429,474 | 107.3 | 1975. 7. 5 | Central African Republic | Bangui | 622,984 | 4,511,488 | 7.2 | 1960. 8. 13 | Chad | N’Djamena | 1,284,000 | 10,329,208 | 8.0 | 1960. 8. 11 | Comoros | Moroni | 2,170 | 752,438 | 346.7 | 1975. 7. 6 | Congo | Brazzaville | 342,000 | 4,012,809 | 11.7 | 1960. 8. 15 | Democratic Republic of Congo | Kinshasha | 2,345,410 | 68,692,542 | 29.2 | 1960. 6. 30 | Côte d’Ivoire | Abidjan, Yamoussoukro | 322,460 | 20,617,068 | 63.9 | 1960. 8. 7 | Djibouti | Djibouti | 23,000 | 516,055 | 22.4 | 1977. 6. 27 | Egypt | Cairo | 1,001,450 | 83,082,869 | 82.9 | 1922. 2. 28 | Equatorial Guinea | Malabo | 28,051 | 633,441 | 22.6 | 1968. 10. 12 | Eritrea | Asmara | 121,320 | 5,647,168 | 46.5 | 1993. 5. 24 | Ethiopia | Addis Ababa | 1,127,127 | 85,237,338 | 75.6 | BC 10세기경1936-1941(이탈리아 통치) | Gabon | Libreville | 267,667 | 1,514,993 | 5.6 | 1960. 8. 17 | Gambia | Banjul | 11,300 | 1,782,893 | 157.7 | 1965. 2. 18 | Ghana | Accra | 239,460 | 23,832,495 | 99.5 | 1957. 3. 6 | Guinea | Conakry | 245,857 | 10,057,975 | 40.9 | 1958. 10. 2 | Guinea-Bissau | Bissau | 36,120 | 1,533,964 | 42.5 | 1973. 9. 24 | Kenya | Nairobi | 582,650 | 39,002,772 | 66.0 | 1963. 12. 12 | Lesotho | Maseru | 30,355 | 2,130,819 | 70.2 | 1966. 10. 4 | Liberia | Monrovia | 111,370 | 3,441,790 | 30.9 | 1847. 7. 26 | Libya | Tripoli | 1,759,540 | 6,310,434 | 3.6 | 1951. 12. 24 | Madagascar | Antananarivo | 587,040 | 20,653,556 | 35.1 | 1960. 6. 26 | Malawi | Lilongwe | 118,480 | 14,268,711 | 120.4 | 1964. 7. 6 | Mali | Bamako | 1,240,000 | 12,666,987 | 10.2 | 1960. 9. 22 | Mauritania | Nouakchott | 1,030,700 | 3,129,486 | 3.0 | 1960. 11. 28 | Mauritius | Port Louis | 2,040 | 1,284,264 | 629.5 | 1968. 3. 12 | Morocco | Rabat | 446,550 | 34,859,364 | 78.0 | 1956. 3. 2(프랑스로부터)1956. 4. 7(스페인으로부터) | Mozambique | Maputo | 801,590 | 21,669,278 | 27.0 | 1975. 6. 25 | Namibia | Windhoek | 825,418 | 2,108,665 | 2.6 | 1990. 3. 21 | Niger | Niamey | 1,267,000 | 15,306,252 | 12.1 | 1960. 8. 3 | Nigeria | Abuja | 923,768 | 149,229,090 | 161.5 | 1960. 10. 1 | Rwanda | Kigali | 26,338 | 10,473,282 | 397.6 | 1962. 7. 1 | São Tomé and Príncipe | São Tomé | 1,001 | 212,679 | 212.4 | 1975. 7. 12 | Senegal | Dakar | 196,190 | 13,711,597 | 69.9 | 1960. 8. 20 | Seychelles | Victoria | 455 | 87,476 | 192.2 | 1976. 6. 29 | Sierra Leone | Freetown | 71,740 | 6,440,053 | 89.9 | 1961. 4. 27 | Somalia | Mogadishu | 637,657 | 9,832,017 | 15.4 | 1960. 7. 1 | South Africa | Bloemfontein(사법)Cape Town(입법)Pretoria(행정) | 1,219,912 | 49,052,489 | 40.2 | 1910. 5. 31 | Sudan | Khartoum | 1,886,068 | 30,894,000(2000) | 16.4 | 1956. 1. 1 | Republic of South Sudan | Juba | 619,745 | 8,260,490(2008) | n.a. | 2011. 7. 9 | Swaziland | Mbabane | 17,363 | 1,123,913 | 64.7 | 1968. 9. 6 | Tanzania | Dodoma | 945,087 | 41,048,532 | 43.3 | 1961. 12. 9 | Togo | Lomé | 56,785 | 6,019,877 | 106.0 | 1960. 4. 27 | Tunisia | Tunis | 163,610 | 10,486,339 | 64.1 | 1956. 3. 20 | Uganda | Kampala | 236,040 | 32,369,558 | 137.1 | 1962. 10. 9 | Zambia | Lusaka | 752,614 | 11,862,740 | 15.7 | 1964. 10. 24 | Zimbabwe | Harare | 390,580 | 11,392,629 | 29.1 | 1980. 4. 18 | 비/미독립 지역 및 해외 영토

지역 혹은 영토 | 중심 도시 | 면적(km2)) | 인구(2009년 추산) | 인구밀도(km2)) | las Islas Canarias(스페인) | Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Santa Cruz de Tenerife | 7,492 | 1,694,477(2001년) | 226.2 | Ceuta (스페인) | | 20 | 71,505(2001년) | 3,575.2 | Madeira Islands(포르투갈) | Funchal | 797 | 245,000(2001년) | 307.4 | Mayotte(프랑스) | Mamoudzou | 374 | 223,765 | 489.7 | Melilla(스페인) | | 12 | 66,411 | 5,534.2 | Réunion(프랑스) | Saint-Denis | 2,512 | 743,981 | 296.2 | Saint Helena | Jamestown | 410 | 7,637 | 14.4 | Western Sahara | El Aaiún | 266,000 | 405,210 | 1.5 |

II. 주요 지형

1. 주요 산 산 | 소재지 | 해발(m) | 킬리만자로 | 탄자니아 | 5,895 | 케냐 | 케냐 | 5,199 | 르웬조리 | 우간다, 콩고민주공화국 | 5,109 | 메루 | 탄자니아 | 4,566 | 라스 데젠 | 이디오피아 | 4,533 | 카리심비 | 르완다, 콩고민주공화국 | 4,507 | 엘곤 | 케냐, 우간다 | 4,321 | 툽칼(애틀러스산맥) | 모로코 | 4,167 | 카메룬 | 카메룬 | 4,075 |

2. 주요 강 강 | 유역면적(km2)) | 길이(km)) | the Nile | 3,400,000 | 6,650 | the Congo | 3,680,000 | 4,700 | the Niger | 2,117,700 | 4,180 | the Zambezi | 1,390,000 | 2,574 | the Orange | 973,000 | 2,200 |

3. 주요 호수 호수 | 소재지 | 면적(km2)) | 최대길이(km) | 최대넓이(km) | 평균수심(m) | 최대수심(m) | Victoria | 케냐, 탄자니아, 우간다 | 68,800 | 337 | 250 | 40 | 83 | Tanganyika | 부룬디, 콩고민주공화국, 탄자니아, 잠비아 | 32,900 | 673 | 72 | 570 | 1,470 | Malawi(Nyasa) | 말라위, 모잠비크, 탄자니아 | 29,600 | 560 | 75 | 292 | 706 | Turkana | 케냐, 이디오피아 | 6,405 | 290 | 32 | 30 | 109 | Albert | 콩고민주공화국, 우간다 | 5,300 | 160 | 30 | 25 | 58 |

4. 주요 사막 사막 | 소재지 | 면적(km2)) | 사하라사막 | 북아프리카 | 9,000,000 | 리비아사막 | 리비아, 이집트, 수단 | 1,100,000 | 칼라하리사막 | 보츠와나, 나미비아 | 900,000 | 나미브사막 | 나미비아 | 80,900 |

아프리카대륙에서 사막은 대부분 북회귀선과 남회귀선에 걸쳐 있음 * 북회귀선(Tropic of Cancer, 적도 이북의 23° 26′ N): 사하라사막, 리비아사막 * 남회귀선(Tropic of Capricorn, 적도 이남의 23° 26′ S): 칼라하리사막, 나미브사막

최대의 국토면적을 가진 국가: Algeria > Democratic Republic of Congo(DRC) > Sudan
대륙 전체에서 가장 작은 나라: Seychelles
대륙 본토에서 가장 작은 나라: the Gambia
인도양의 도서국가: 마다가스카르, 모리셔스, 세이쉘, 코모로
대서양의 도서국가: 케이프 베르데, 쌍토메프린시페

舊名(Former Names)
국명
Dahomey → Benin
Bechuanaland → Botswana
Ruanda-Urundi → Rwanda, Burundi
French Cameroun, British Cameroon → Cameroon
Ubangi-Shairi → Central African Republic(CAR)
Middle Congo → Congo
French Somaliland → Djibouti
United Arab Republic → Egypt
Spanish Guinea → Equatorial Guinea(Guinea Ecuatorial)
Abyssinia → Ethiopia
Gold Coast → Ghana
Portuguese Guinea → Guinea-Bissau(Guiné-Bissau)
Basutoland → Lesotho
Nyasaland → Malawi
French Sudan → Mali
South West Africa → Namibia
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan → Sudan
Tanganyika & Zanzibar → Tanzania
Togoland → Togo
Spanish Sahara → Western Sahara
Belgian Congo → Zaire → Democratic Republic of Congo(DRC)
Northern Rhodesia → Zambia
Southern Rhodesia → Rhodesia → Zimbabwe
French Upper Volta → Republic of Upper Volta → Burkina Faso

도시명
Fort-Lamy(Amédée-François Lamy) → Ndjamena(Chad)
Santa Isabel → Malabo(Equatorial Guinea)
Bathurst → Banjul(the Gambia)
Lourenço Marques → Maputo(Mozambique)
Salisbury → Harare(Zimbabwe)

국명과 도시명의 유래 * Liberia는 1847년 미국에서 해방된 흑인 노예들이(Americo-Liberians)이 건설한 국가이다. ‘자유의 나라’라는 의미의 Liberia를 국명으로 삼고 수도는 미국의 제5대 대통령이었던 James Monroe(1758-1831)를 기려 Monrovia로 부름. * 시에라레온의 Freetown도 미국에서 해방된 흑인 노예들이 건설한 도시

* 영국 태생의 사업가이자 정치가였던 Cecile John Rhodes(1853-1902)가 자신의 이름을 따서 ‘로즈의 나라’라는 의미의 Rhodesia를 오늘날의 잠비아와 짐바브웨을 칭하는데 사용. Cecile John Rhodes는 De Beers社의 창업주로서 Rhodes Scholarship을 마련. * 아랍인들은 사하라사막의 서부에서 남부에 이르는 광범위한 지역을 ‘검은 사람들의 나라(bilad as-Sudan)’라는 의미를 지닌 ‘Sudan’으로 명명 * 카메룬(Cameroon)은 포르투갈 항해자들이 Wuri강을 ‘rio dos camerroes(새우들의 강)’라고 불렀던 사실에서 연유하는데 독일어로는 ‘Kamerun’, 불어로는 ‘Cameroun’, 영어로는 ‘Cameroon’으로 표기. * Upper Volta는 1984년 토마 상카라대통령이 취임 1주년을 맞이하여 이 나라의 주요한 두 고유어인 모시와 줄라어로 ‘고결한 사람들이 살아가는 나라’라는 의미를 지닌 ‘부르키나 파소’로 국명을 개칭

탐험가
Stanleyville: 탐험가 Henry Morton Stanley의 이름을 딴 도시명으로 나중에 Kisangani(DRC)로
개칭
Brazzaville: 콩고공화국(République du Congo)의 수도로 프랑스의 탐험가 피에르 사보르냥 드
브라자(Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza)의 이름을 따서 명명
Livingstonia: 말라위 북부의 도시로 탐험가 David Livingstone의 이름을 따서 명명

유럽의 왕실과 아프리카 탐험 후원자들
Mosi-oa-tunya(the smoke that thunders) → Dr. David Livingstone이 the Victoria Falls로 명명
Lake Victoria: 1858년 유럽인으로서 호수를 처음 발견한 John Hanning Speke이 빅토리아여왕의
이름을 붙임
Lake Albert: 1864년 호수를 발견한 Samuel Baker가 빅토리아여왕의 부군인 Prince Albert of Saxe-
Coburg and Gotha의 이름을 따서 명명
Lake Edward: Henry Morton Stanley가 웨일즈공 Prince Albert Edward의 이름을 따서 명명
하였는데 우간다에서 이디 아민이 집권하면서 Lake Idi Amin Dada로 바뀌었다가 그가 실권
하면서 예전의 이름으로 돌아감.
Murchison Falls: 탐험가 Samuel Baker가 왕립지리학회 회장이었던 Sir Roderick Murchison의
이름을 붙임

유럽의 지명 * 말라위 최대 도시인 Blantyre는 David Livingstone의 출생지인 영국 Scotland의 South
Lanarkshire에 소재한 작은 도시의 이름 * Nouvelle-Anvers는 콩고민주공화국의 도시로 벨기에의 앤트워프에서 유래

정치권력 강화 수단으로서의 지명 변경
1965년 미국과 서방의 지원을 받고 쿠데타를 통해 권력을 장악한 모부투는 이후 인권탄압, 정치적 폭압, 개인숭배, 부패 등으로 인하여 대내외적으로 여론이 악화되고 비난이 고조되었다. 이에 모부투는 1960년대 후반부터 1970년대에 authenticité라는 국가통치 이데올로기를 만들어 아프리카 민족주의를 전면에 내세웠다. 자신의 이름을 비롯한 식민주의적 잔재가 남아 있던 지명들을 모두 바꾸는 조치를 취했다.
Joseph-Désiré Mobutu → Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga(지나간 자국마다 불을 남기며 승리에 승리를 거듭하는, 아무도 가로막을 수 없는 위대한 전사)

국명; République Démocratique du Congo → République du Zaïre
도시명: Léopoldville → Kinshasha
Elisabethville → Lubumbashi
Stanleyville → Kisangani

인종차별정책 종식 이후 남아공사회에서의 지명 변화
1998년 The South African Geographical Names Council(SAGNC)를 발족시켜 지방, 거리, 기념물, 공공기관 등에 대한 명칭 변경 작업 시행 * 장소와 정체성을 결부시키는 문제 * 경제적 비용 * 언어, 문화, 정체성과의 관련성 * 역사적 인물들에 대한 사회적 평가와 합의
예) Jan Smuts International Airport → Johannesburg Int’l Airport → OR Tambo Int’l Airport

지역명
1) 사헬지역(Sahel, Sahel Belt)은 서부아프리카 모리타니아에서 동부의 에리트리아에 걸쳐 있는
지역으로 사하라사막의 아래에 위치한 반건조지대이다. 모리타니아, 세네갈, 말리, 부르키나 파소, 니제르, 나이지리아, 수단, 에리트리아가 사헬지역에 걸쳐 있는 국가들이다.

2) 아프리카의 뿔(Horn of Africa)은 아프리카대륙 북동부의 뿔처럼 돌출된 지역을 가리키는데
소말리아, 이디오피아, 에리트리아, 지부티가 이 지역에 위치한 국가들이다.

3) 대호수지역(Great Lakes region)은 빅토리아, 탕가뉘카, 앨버트, 키부호 등이 위치한 지역을
가리키는데 국가로는 르완다, 부룬디, 콩고민주공화국의 동부지역이 이에 해당된다.

4) 황금해안(Gold Coast): Ghana
곡물해안(Grain Coast): Liberia
후추해안(Pepper Coast): Liberia
노예해안(Slave Coast): Benin

Similar Documents

Premium Essay

Africa

...Botswana and South Africa are two biggest exporting countries in Africa. South Africa is the world’s biggest producer of gold as well as diamonds. The country has a well-developed law system. South Africa has a large pool of skilled labor and, advanced infrastructure and developed financial resources. All these factors are mostly missing from other countries. The main exports of African nations are: * Palm oil * Gold and diamonds * Oil * Cocoa * Timber * Precious metals  Africa struggles with food items and basic facilities. It is often under the grip of internal outbreaks, leaving less scope for infrastructural or administrative change over. Therefore, African imports feature medical supplies as well as food items The main imported commodities are: * Machinery and equipment * Chemicals * Petroleum products * Scientific instruments * Foodstuffs Principal trading partners of Africa include Germany, the United States, China, Japan, the United Kingdom and Spain. Per Capita GDP Africa | Algeria | 5.6 | 7200 | 69.90% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Angola | 4.3 | 5900 | 67.40% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Benin | 3 | 1500 | 34.70% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Botswana | 4.7 | 16300 | 81.20% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Burkina Faso | 3.6 | 1500 | 21.80% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Burundi | 2.9 | 400 | 67.30% | | | | | | | | | Africa | Cameroon | 3.9 | 2300 | 75.90% | | | | |...

Words: 950 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Africa

...REGIONALISM IN AFRICA : A PART OF PROBLEM OR A PART OF SOLUTION Margaret LEE AAPS INTRODUCTION Regionalism, as defined in this paper, encompasses efforts by a group of nations to enhance their economic, political, social, or cultural interaction. Such efforts can take on different forms, including regional cooperation, market integration, development integration, and regional integration. African leaders have long envisaged regionalism as a viable strategy to pursue with a view to uniting the continent both politically and economically. While regionalism in Africa has taken on different forms to accommodate the changing national, regional, and international environment, all organizations that aim to integrate regional economies in Africa have adopted market integration as a component of their strategy, with a view to increasing intra-regional trade. Market integration is the linear progression of degrees of integration beginning with a free trade area (or in some cases a preferential trade area) and ending with total economic integration. The model for such integration is the European Union (EU). Notwithstanding the fact that market integration has failed miserably on the continent,1 it continues to be highly regarded by most African leaders as a solution to Africa’ growing marginalization within the world economy. The creation of NAFTA s (North American Free Trade Agreement) and the movement toward EU monetary integration, only served to reinforce the commitment African...

Words: 11675 - Pages: 47

Free Essay

Africa

...One of the reasons why Africa was and is so highly appealing to outsiders is because it is amongst the world’s greatest water and mineral resources(381). The modern European colonization of Africa was begun by the Portuguese. They established trading stations on the coast in the 15th and 16th centuries. The interior of what Europeans called "the Dark Continent", however, was not explored or colonized until the 19th century. By the early 20th century nearly all of Africa had been subjected to European rule. During early explorations Europeans, the Portuguese to be specific, took immediate notice to the wealth of the African continent by building forts at coastal trading posts in Western Africa, where ships could be loaded with the local slaves, gold, ivory, and palm products in exchange for alcohol, guns, and sugar; the vast wealth of certain areas in the Western African coast were given nicknames such as, Ivory Coast, Gold Coast, and Slave Coast for their chief products. Portuguese ships took gold from Eastern Africa to pay for the silks and spices of Asia(389). This world region has clear, mainly coastal, boundaries. In the colonial late 1800s and early 1900s, trade routes and connections moved away from the land crossing of the Sahara that connected northernmost Africa with the rest of the continent and toward the ocean routes linked with the expanding European global economy(380). Africa has a wealth of natural resources. Overall, however, Africa's potential mineral resources...

Words: 519 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Africa

...Kleptocracy Economics of corruption Electoral fraud Legal plunder Nepotism Slush fund Plutocracy Political scandal Corruption by country Europe Albania Armenia Austria Belgium Bosnia Denmark Finland France Germany Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Georgia Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Kosovo Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Macedonia Moldova Montenegro Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Ukraine Asia Afghanistan Bahrain Bangladesh Cambodia China India Indonesia Iran Iraq Jordan Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Malaysia Myanmar North Korea Pakistan Philippines Singapore South Korea Sri Lanka Thailand Uzbekistan Vietnam Africa Angola Botswana Cameroon Congo Egypt Equatorial Guinea Ethiopia Ghana Kenya Liberia Mauritius Morocco Nigeria Senegal Somalia South Africa South Sudan Sudan Tanzania Tunisia Uganda Zambia Zimbabwe North America Canada Cuba Haiti Mexico Nicaragua United States South America Argentina Brazil Chile Colombia Paraguay Peru Venezuela Oceania and the Pacific Australia New Zealand Papua New Guinea Transcontinental countries Russia Turkey v t e Political corruption in the post-colonial government of Kenya has had a history which spans the era of the Jomo Kenyatta and Daniel arap Moi's KANU governments to Mwai Kibaki's PNU government. In the Corruption Perceptions Index 2012 Kenya is ranked 139th out of 176 countries for corruption, tied with Azerbaijan, Nepal...

Words: 390 - Pages: 2

Free Essay

Africa

...Firstly, women were affected by the alienation of land experienced by most Africans. However, women appear to have been more personally affected by this land alienation. This is because, ‘As women lost access and control of land they became more economically dependent on men. This led to an intensification of domestic patriarchy, reinforced by colonial social institutions.’ Among the Kikuyu of Kenya women were the major food producers and thus not only had ready access to land but also authority over how land was to be cultivated. Speaking about African women in general, Seenarine, in quoting Sacks explains that, ‘the value of women’s productive labor, in producing and processing food established and maintained their rights in domestic and other spheres – economic, cultural, religious, social, political, etc.’ The advent of the British colonialism and the settler economy negatively impacted Kikuyu women because the loss of land meant a loss of access to and authority over land. Kikuyu women found that they no longer had the variety of soils needed to grow indigenous foodstuffs. Traditionally, certain pieces of land were associated with the growth of certain crops. Thus the variety of soils was required to ensure food security . Moreover, land loss meant women were restricted to smaller tracts of land for cultivation. Continuous cultivation of these areas of land led to soil exhaustion and nutrient depletion which ultimately adversely affected crop yields. Land alienation...

Words: 2350 - Pages: 10

Free Essay

Africa

...Marigona Misini Africa Music of Africa is divided into three main regions, which includes Shona, BaAka, and Kpelle. Shona ethnic group is from Zimbabwe. Shona’s belief is that when they die their spirits will play a role in lives of their people still living. Their main instrument is called mbira, which is a thumb piano. The song Nhemamusasa shows someone teaching the song and shows the interlocking pattern of the different melodies being played. This music is a polyphonic texture because many melodies are played at once. The Kpelle ethnic group is from Liberia. This music of Africa usually plays segments of stories. The “Kalu Lee, Lee”, is an example of one episode or short segment of a full story, but the Woi epic is a series of episodes that never ends, which is why its called cyclical. African music is made up of short segments or episodes of stories that create a whole to define faceting. Facets are short and repetitive which loses the direction of their music. Most African music is simple music so not really complex. Facets allow Africans to maximize their use of limited resources. “Horn and Drum Ensemble”, describes how they use their simple instruments to organize something more complex. Call and response is an important way of organizing and forming music. This form creates conversation and interaction within the music and uses collective participation because it involves everyone. There is a lead singer and the chorus joining the leader and there are several individual...

Words: 343 - Pages: 2

Free Essay

Africa

...Africa: Bharti Airtel Unfolds New Partnership Strategy to Boost Service Across Africa Moses Nosike And Emmanuel Elebeke 29 October 2010 [pic] Email| Print| Comment Share: |[pic] |[pic] |[pic] |[pic] |[pic] |[pic] | | Leading global telecommunications company, Bharti Airtel yesterday announced a new strategic partnership with IBM, Tech Mahindra and Spanco to drive world class customer service across 16 African countries where it operates. The partnership is also aimed at igniting a rapid growth in the nascent African Business Process (BPO) to deliver economic growth to many countries across the continent of Africa. Under the new agreement which is expected to be finalized soon, Bharti Airtel, which owns and currently operates the Zain brand in 16 countries across Africa, will outsource core customer service functions like call centres and back office to over 40 million of its subscribers as it prepares for significant growth in the region. Unfolding the agenda to the press in Lagos, the Chief Executive Officer (International) and joint managing Director, Bharti Airtel, Manoj Kohli said "Our partnership with IBM, Tech Mahindra and Spanco is aimed at redefining and providing a world class and seamless customer experience in all 16 countries we operate in Africa" He explained that the Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) model partnership would enable Bharti Airtel customers to enjoy world class customer services with the partners introducing quality best practices...

Words: 426 - Pages: 2

Premium Essay

Hunger in Africa

...Rich Summative Task HUNGER IN AFRICA Christine Mande HEOR-02 Mr.Dragan January 18th 2013 Hunger is one of the most common problems in the world. It is such a dangerous thing. It kills more people in a year than AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined. Many countries struggle with famine and they don’t have much help either. Countries like Somalia, Ethiopia, Mozambique and Sudan are some of the countries that suffer from hunger more than others do. In Africa there are 60% of people who go to bed hungry and mainly half of those 60% barely ever eat. Still out of those 60%, only 37% get to drink clean water and the rest doesn’t. Almost more than a million of people die of hunger in Africa. It has already become a serious problem. You might ask yourself “Why are the people in Africa starving?” Well the reason why they starve is because the continent’s population is grows by 3.5% every year and therefore the food dies down by 2.5% also every year that goes by and on top of that, the people have difficulties growing crops because 47% of the whole entire continent of Africa is way to dry for rain fed crops. The Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Eritrea, Sierra Leone, Chad and Ethiopia are some of the top countries that are severely stricken by hunger. Those countries all have the same problems. Not enough water and food. Not enough money for irrigation, too much heat and not enough rain for crops to grow and too many people are unemployed. There is also...

Words: 905 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Scramble for Africa

...DAVID DAMIETE DOKUBO 0-7682090 THE REASON FOR THE SCRAMBLE FOR AFRICA, AND WHY THE AFRICANS COULDNT STOP COLIONIALISM. During the scramble for Africa, the Europeans basically had a lot to prove to each other. It is very easy to understand that at the time (1800-1900) European countries still struggled in crude ways to show dominance. This fact however couldn’t have single handedly driven the Europeans to Africa. There were also very rational reasons why. In this essay, those reasons will be stated. There were economic causes. The 1800s were very economically unsettled times that even lead to a depression in 1873. During this period, every industrial country was hurt, and Britain was seriously affected. Britain relied on raw materials, thus damaging its balance of trade. It also shouldn’t be forgotten, that there was a serious competition between newly industrializing nations that had new factories, and cheap labor. There was also the problem of political direst. These issues are known to arise in a state of economical instability. Europe at the afore mentioned time, experienced that problem. Britain particularly was undergoing significant changes in their system. The country that was once used to a unified political party system, had to evolve to a more fragmented patchwork of special interest groups like labor unions, landowners, bankers, industrialists etc. The people in power were eager for a new cause to unite the people when it mattered. In the year 1871, the...

Words: 519 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Imperialism In Africa

...change the world. Imperialism in Africa significantly altered much of the continent, both for better and for worse. European imperialist expansion in Africa, had gave them new resources that they still use today. Hospitals, school and factories were built creating more jobs for the people of Africa. The amount of local warfare was reduced greatly...

Words: 350 - Pages: 2

Premium Essay

Slavery in Africa

...April 13, 2012 Modern-day slaves can be found labouring as servants or concubines in Sudan, as child "carpet slaves" in India, or as cane-cutters in Haiti and southern Pakistan, to name instances. According to Anti-Slavery International, the world's oldest human rights organization, there are currently over 20 million people currently enslaved and working as slaves. The slave trade in Africa was officially banned in the early 1880s, but forced labour continues to be practiced in West and Central Africa today. UNICEF estimates that 200,000 children from this region are sold into slavery each year. Many of these children are from Benin and Togo, and are sold into the domestic, agricultural, and sex industries of wealthier, neighbouring countries such as Nigeria and Gabon. Kidnapped from their villages when they are as young as five years old, between 200,000 and 300,000 children are held captive in locked rooms and forced to weave on looms for food. Many of the bonded labourers are shackled in leg-irons in Pakistan. In the Dominican Republic, the collection of slaves for the busy harvest season is more random. The Dominican army, with the support of the State Sugar Council (known as the CEA), drags Haitians off public buses, arrests them in their homes or at their jobs, and delivers them to the cane fields. However in the in the ancient world slavery was common. The great civilizations of the Middle East, the Americas, Europe, and West Indies all kept slaves. Slavery was also...

Words: 442 - Pages: 2

Premium Essay

Poverty in Africa

...[Name] [Course Title] [Instructor Name] [Date] Write a research paper on Poverty in Africa. Describe how/in what way it is such a big problem in the world, possible causes and possible solutions in which you think these problems can be solved. Contents Abstract 3 Introduction: 4 Overview of poverty in Africa: 4 Facts about poverty in Africa: 5 Graph: 6 Causes of poverty in Africa: 7 1. Corruption and Poor Governance: 7 a) Unbalanced Economic Systems: 7 2. Environment: 8 3. Poor Utilization of Land: 8 4. Increase in Population: 9 5. Diseases and poor health facilities: 10 Solutions to overcome poverty: 10 1. Overcoming government failure: 10 2. Education: 11 3. Population control 11 4. Focus on agriculture: 12 5. Other possible solutions: 12 References: 13 Abstract This paper will provide a deep insight into the problems of poor people and their causes of poverty. Other than that solutions to their issues regarding the government and basic necessities of live will be focused upon. The deprivation of services for the poor is another noticeable point in the paper. Introduction: Poor people are poor because of many reasons, but they remain poor because market and government does not support them. When capital markets fail, youth is unable to get loans to finance their education, they are not capable of maintaining their health and most importantly the government is unable to provide them with basic services and...

Words: 2300 - Pages: 10

Premium Essay

Conflicts in Africa

...Conflicts in Africa Terrell Campbell English 103 Professor Duguay March 31, 2015 Despising the decades of conflict, death and tragedy, coverage of issues in Africa has often been ignored, overgeneralized, or unreasonably focused on limited aspects. There is a deeper analysis, background and context that has often been lacking, so regardless of what seems like constant images of starving children in scarcities, news of billions in aid to Africa from generous donor countries, the background context and analysis is often missing. Whether aid makes the situation worse, or why there is scarcity and hunger in Africa when African nations are exporting crops to other parts of the world are rarely asked by the mainstream. Why is Africa so violent? There is a reason why some of Africa’s bloodiest, and brutal wars never seem to end is because they’re not really wars. Not in the traditional sense, at least. The soldiers don’t have much of an ideology, not much of a clear goal. They couldn’t care less about taking over capitals or major cities — in fact, they prefer the deep bush, where it is far easier to commit crimes. Today’s rebels seem especially uninterested in winning converts, content instead to steal other people’s children, stick axes in their hands, and make them do the killing. Most of today’s African fighters are not rebels with a cause, but predators. That’s why there are stunning slaughters like eastern Congo’s rape epidemic, where armed groups in recent years have...

Words: 837 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Ngo in Africa

...The role of NGO”S in development Africa The literature on development has long recognized the importance of the third sector. Throughout the 1980s there was an evident and growing enthusiasm for the contribution of NGOs particularly for their ability to work directly with the poor and with grassroots organisations (Turner,1988; Gorman,1984). According to Carroll (1992), it was in 1985 that official development agencies arrived at the same conclusion that the advantages of NGOs, such as flexibility, informality, commitment, and participatory style, outweighed their disadvantages and made them especially suited for the complex task of rural development projects aimed at alleviating poverty, in which physical capital is combined with human and organizational resources. By the end of the 1980s, reports from the OECD (1988), Asian Development Bank (1990, 1991) and World Bank (1991) all argued that NGOs have a particular ability to work effectively with the poorest communities. The early 1990s saw a distinct change in emphasis, with greater weight being placed on the term civil society than on non-governmental organisation. Although this change cannot be attributed to any single factor, a number of emerging concerns may offer some insights. The work of authors such as Putnam (1993) showed the importance of non-governmental and non-private sector institutions and demonstrated that it would be useful to work with wider definitions than were typically being used. Third, it was recognized...

Words: 830 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Africa

...Africa 10 frica lies south of Europe and southwest of Asia. Geographically it is about three times the size of the United States, excluding Alaska and Hawaii. At its northeast corner is Egypt, which is connected to the Sinai Peninsula—and hence to the Asian continent by a very narrow strip of land. This is the only spot where Africa touches another continent; otherwise, it is surrounded by water. The Mediterranean Sea separates it from Europe in the north; the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden lie between it and the Arabian Peninsula to the east. Two vast bodies of water—the Indian Ocean on the eastern side, and the even larger Atlantic on the west—surround the remainder of Africa. A Why Africa is important One of the greatest civilizations of all time, Egypt, was in Africa. Perhaps the only ancient civilizations that can be compared with it are those of Greece and Rome, which were influenced by it. Egypt, of course, has had its own chapter in this series; and Carthage, in North Africa, is also covered elsewhere. The focus of this chapter is entirely on Africa south of the Sahara 283 Map of Africa. XNR Productions. The Gale Group. Desert—that is, sub-Saharan Africa—as well as on the desert itself. That desert would have an impact on African history right up to the modern day; so, too, would the African civilizations of ancient times. There was the kingdom of Kush, which developed its own form of writing and briefly ruled Egypt; the kingdom of Aksum, an important trading...

Words: 7373 - Pages: 30