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Voting for Democracy - Watershed Elections in Contemporary Anglophone Africa (Hardcover)
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Voting for Democracy - Watershed Elections in Contemporary Anglophone Africa (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Revivals
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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First published in 1999, the essays in this book examine the
context and conduct of a series of watershed elections held in
Anglophone Africa in the first half of the 1990s. These elections
crystallized a wider process of democratization, underway in much
of sub-Saharan Africa during the last decade, in which attempts
were made to shift from various forms of authoritarian rule
(colonial or racial oligarchies, military regimes, one-party
states, or presidential rule) to pluralist parliamentary politics.
This volume brings together for the first time, studies of these
events in countries sharing a comparable legacy of British
colonialism, an acquaintance with the Westminster constitutional
tradition and related experiences of decolonization and democratic
struggle. Written from a variety of perspectives by contributors
with first-hand knowledge and long experience of research in
Africa, the papers situate each election in its wider political
context, examining the political forces at work and the events
which gave rise to reform. All indicate that, despite Western
pressure for reform and the influence of the collapse of the Soviet
Bloc in Eastern Europe, internal African demands for democracy
provided the primary driving force for change. Not all the
elections fulfilled the hopes invested in them. In Nigeria, they
were annulled before all the votes had been counted. In Kenya, the
disarray of the opposition ensured the return to power of the old
order. Even where they produced a successful regime transition, the
democratic credentials of the new governments were sometimes
seriously flawed. Yet for all these limitations, these watershed
elections signalled important progress for African democracy. They
brought a formal end to colonial rule in Namibia and to three
centuries of racial discrimination in South Africa. They brought
changes of government through the ballot box in Zambia and Malawi,
among the first instances in Africa of such change being
accomplished without the use of force. Above all, they provided
African electorates with an opportunity to pass judgement on
long-serving authoritarian regimes - with unequivocal results: in
every case, when given the chance to vote, Africans voted for
democracy.
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