From Capture to Caloric Sovereignty

Auteurs

  • Nsiangani, K Université Simon Kimbangu image/svg+xml Auteur·e
  • Walker, B U of Charlotte Auteur·e
  • Camara, A Abidjan Auteur·e

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.65439/ykn40c95

Mots-clés :

African Union (AU) organs, agriculture, IMF, capture, Economies of Obedience, ISM, PDI, public health, utrition in Africa, caloric sovereignty

Résumé

Target audience: African Union (AU) organs, Ministers of Education/Health/Youth/Gender, national curriculum authorities
Keywords: agriculture, IMF, capture, Economies of Obedience, ISM,PDI, public health, nutrition in Africa, policy, Africa, caloric sovereignty

Abstract

This paper uses Burkina Faso’s recent agricultural performance as a test case for a broader hypothesis: that loosening Western institutional capture – military, financial, and narrative – can rapidly increase a state’s caloric sovereignty, while long-term IMF/World Bank structuring correlates with persistent food import dependence and vulnerability. I frame this through the Extraction–Inversion Architecture (EIA): extraction of value, coercive constraint, and narrative inversion that relocates blame to the victim society. Using a simple comparative design, I contrast Burkina Faso (post-2019 insurgency crisis, post-French military exit, AES realignment) with three cases: Haiti (catastrophic collapse under long IMF/US tutelage), Ghana (average “reformer” under a 2023 IMF programme), and Morocco (high-performing but structurally import-dependent “model pupil”). FAO and official data indicate Burkina’s cereal production at about 6.1 million tonnes in 2024 (20 percent above the five-year average) with provisional 2025–2026 figures suggesting 7.14 million tonnes and 126.4 percent coverage of national cereal needs. I show how changes in security doctrine, land allocation, and budget focus translate into caloric coverage, price stability, and space for productive innovation, whereas heavily “programme-managed” states remain structurally dependent on imports and vulnerable to shocks.

 

Biographies des auteurs

  • Nsiangani, K, Université Simon Kimbangu

    Head of Dpt

  • Walker, B, U of Charlotte

    Historian (Charlotte, USA); 

  • Camara, A, Abidjan

    Economist

Téléchargements

Publiée

2025-12-08

Comment citer

From Capture to Caloric Sovereignty. (2025). USK Journal of Political Science and Epistemology, 29(1). https://doi.org/10.65439/ykn40c95