Abstract

This paper evaluates anglophone Cameroon's right to self-determination and explores the possibilities open to a people within the context of an African nation state to exercise this right, including the option to secede. Considering the ‘soft underbelly’ of African boundaries, the intention is to look at the contemporary position of African states vis-à-vis the exercise of the right to self-determination. The paper concludes by exposing the consequences of the persistent denial of anglophone Cameroon's right to self-determination on the future of democracy in Cameroon and on the stability of the region as whole.

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