For more than six decades, African leaders and institutions have consistently articulated a vision of continental unity,
integration, and shared prosperity. From the founding of the OAU in 1963 to Agenda 2063, the ambition has remained remarkably clear.
Yet the outcomes have not matched the vision.
Why?
In Referendum--- Why Sub-Saharan Africa Must Reauthorize Unity Now, Sekou S. Toure argues that the central constraint is not a lack of ideas, resources,
or political declarations-but a deeper structural issue: the absence of popular authorization at the scale of ambition.
Drawing on six decades of institutional commitments, comparative political analysis, and economic evidence, this book introduces a bold but rigorously grounded proposition:
That the next phase of Sub-Saharan African integration may require not another declaration, but a Sub-Saharan Africa-wide referendum.
This work challenges prevailing assumptions about sovereignty, governance, and development in
Sub-Saharan Africa, and offers a new framework for understanding why transformative ambitions have repeatedly stalled-and what it would take to realize them.
Essential reading for policymakers, scholars, development practitioners, and a new generation of Sub-Saharan African leaders seeking to rethink the foundations of integration, legitimacy, and collective action.
"The missing link between vision and transformation may be authorization."