Fixing Africa: Once and for All is a 2009 book focused on "improving Africa and moving it forward from the hardships that have plagued the continent's past." A child of
Pan-Africanism, the premise surrounds a conglomeration of Africa's 54 countries currently represented into 3 "Super Federations" by the year 2030.
Inspiration Tall's inspiration for
Fixing Africa came from the "hypocrisy" of the fiftieth anniversary independence celebrations held in many African nations between 2007 and 2010, in particular the fiftieth anniversary of
Guinea's independence from France in 2008. "This destitute country had honestly nothing to celebrate with such an economic situation" he said in 2011. Multimillion-dollar celebrations were occurring in spite of what Tall saw as decades of lost progress and a population largely living in misery and humiliation. His goal was to "inform a new generation of Africans and set high expectations within them to ensure that, with the ascension of a new breed of leaders might Africa's people be delivered out of
poverty,
diseases,
wars,
famine, economic meltdown, political paralysis, and 360-degree insecurity."
Key messages Summarized,
Fixing Africa is based on three key ideals: • All 54 African countries are struggling. The denial must end so the recovery can start. • Individually African men and women have shown that they can perform at a global level in any field, anytime and anywhere. • New ideas and bold actions are required to translate individual achievements into collective progress. discusses the counterintuitive negative impact associated with African aid in the book
Dead Aid. Moyo "describes the state of postwar development policy in Africa today and unflinchingly confronts one of the greatest myths of our time: that billions of dollars in aid sent from wealthy countries to developing African nations has helped to reduce poverty and increase growth."
Martin Meredith, historian and journalist, provides a controversial Western viewpoint on fifty years of African independence, and the many failures that have accompanied it, in the book
The Fate of Africa: A History of Fifty Years of Independence. ==Personal life==