9
Africa
roger southall
It remains fashionable to refer to the contemporary impetus
for democracy in Africa as the ‘second wave of independence’ or as a major aspect of ‘African renaissance’. Such
terms embody two major meanings: the disastrous failure
of democratization efforts following political independence
in the 1960s; and the umbilical relationship between social
and economic development and democratization, if the latter is ever to take root in an Africa that is mired in poverty.
The view that Africa is ‘trying again’ points not only to
how a paradigm of democratization has assumed primacy
in analysis of the continent’s condition since the early 1990s,
but how that paradigm has become inextricably entangled
with political and intellectual activism. Indeed, the urgency
of democratization debates flows both from the desperate
condition of the mass of Africa’s people and from the fact
that, while on the one hand ‘democratization’ has in essence
replaced Marxism as both explanatory device and panacea,
it has on the other been appropriated as goal and tool by
Western policy agendas.
Democratization in Africa: the first wave
Early approaches to democratization in Africa were largely
subsumed under the closely interrelated perspectives of
modernization and nationalism. The study of democratization arrived in the 1950s and 1960s as an accompaniment
of decolonization, and in its most systematic and coherent
form drew heavily on American political science. The study
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of politics in Africa was discouraged during the colonial era.
African peoples were regarded as backward, if not barbaric,
and hence unsuited to the pursuit of ‘politics’ – conceived
in terms of a civilized liberal ideal. Moreover ‘politics’ was
presumed to entail the prior existence of ‘the state’, which
at most, was taken to exist only in potential terms under
colonial tutelage. When, belatedly political science did
arrive, in response to the decolonizing formation of ‘new
states’, it did so largely with all the baggage of American
liberal commitment, with its diverse mix of idealism,
universalism and (paradoxically) blinkered ethnocentrism
(Omoruyi 1983).
Africa’s ‘new states’ were assumed to be in the throes of
a process of political modernization, whose end-state had
an uncanny resemblance to political life in the industrialized
West. In part, modernization theory was a response to the
failures of orthodox economics, which was criticized as
failing to comprehend the complex interactions between
social change and economic development. Modernization
was viewed as taking place via the diffusion of ‘modern
values’, through education and technology transfer, amongst
the new African elites who were at the head of the struggle
against colonialism. A central preoccupation of political
scientists consisted of the difficulties of ‘political institutional transfer’, which ran up against the embeddedness of
traditional authority, especially as represented by the chiefs,
who symbolized local particularities and the communal
values of tribal life. Indeed, modernization was viewed by
political scientists and nationalists alike as above all Africa’s
transition away from an inhibiting tribalism towards a
modern nationhood which, buoyed up by rapid economic
development, would represent sovereign if not actual equality with the former imperial powers.
If the process of ‘nation-building’ or ‘national integration’
was the primary responsibility of Africa’s modernizing elites,
the principal instrument was the political party, whose
function was not only to ‘articulate’ and ‘aggregate’ public
opinion but to engage in the promethean task of ‘political
mobilization’, of forging links between tribe and nation.
It was in the study of parties that the supposed ‘valuefreedom’ of Western political science most easily cohabited
with political idealism. Their formation and development
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represented not only the most explicit embodiment of
political modernization but also the condensation of heroic
nationalist struggles for the achievement of the classic liberal
goals of liberty, equality and fraternity. The very classification of parties symbolized the implacable advance of progress. For whereas cadre or elite parties were customarily
formed as defensive reactions by traditional elites to the
threats posed by modernization, mass nationalist parties
were the creations of the forward-looking elites, who had
appropriated the language of liberalism imported by colonialism, exposed colonial tutelage as self-serving, and honed
the demand for African self-determination, sovereignty and
racial equality. Significantly, however, whereas Western
liberal-democratic thought was founded principally upon
rational individualism as found in the political theories of
Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) and John Locke (1632–1704),
African nationalism, emphasizing the putative solidarity
of rapidly-forming, self-conscious, African national collectivities, had much greater affinity to the romanticism of
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–78). Consequently ‘African
democracy’ soon came to resemble more the ‘people’s democracies’ of the communist world than Western liberaldemocracies. This was to have grave consequences in later
decades, when the hollowness of Africa’s first attempt at
democracy was to be laid bare by appalling widespread
violations of human rights by regimes claiming to possess
popular legitimacy.
The fairly rapid political atrophy of the first wave of
nationalist democracy in Africa, as first one-party regimes
and then military rule took hold in an increasing number
of states, was greeted in two ways. First, authoritarian trends
were often conceived as a not irrational response by the
modernizing elites to ‘the dramatic danger of disorder and
perhaps even of regression’ (Zolberg 1966: 6). Thus Africa
appeared to have too little, not too much, authority, although
the most astute observers recognized that the conditions
for authoritarian rule to bring about modernization were
not yet present, and that the costs could be very great. The
alternative therefore lay in the pursuit of a more limited
version of democracy, one that would deal with societal
stresses and strains by the sort of machine politics that
characterized Western countries before they became fully
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industrialized and modernized. Developing institutions like
the civil service and military that could contain the urban
masses would also help, for rising expectations were reckoned
to constitute a serious threat to the political stability
upon which industrialization and modernization (and hence
democratization) ultimately depended (Huntington 1968).
However, in contrast to such conservative responses, the
second major response to the rising tide of authoritarianism was a reaction against modernization theory and an
embrace of radical or Marxist political economy.
Part of the problem for modernization theory was that
its intellectual armoury was closely aligned with American
foreign policy, preoccupied as it was with containing communism. There was, as Leys (1996: 11) claims, a silence
about the social side of development that was cloaked by
the doctrine of ‘value-freedom’. The capitalist character of
the development that modernization anticipated was not
openly acknowledged. Yet by the late 1960s and early 1970s,
the outlines of an emerging African crisis were already manifest in the form of economic stagnation, political instability,
authoritarian rule, militarism and not least, the rapid and
highly visible formation of African privileged classes whose
typically kleptocratic behaviour challenged their characterization as a ‘modernizing elite’. Not surprisingly, African
scholars were increasingly drawn to the theories of the
(metropolitan) ‘new left’ (which was simultaneously engaged
in a critique of mainstream political science) and more
particularly to a tradition of ‘expository radicalism’ in
African studies – building on early works by such writers
as W. E. B. Dubois and George Padmore, who argued how
European colonialism had destroyed African civilizations
and social and economic formations.
Rodney (1972), for instance, drew not only upon ‘expository radicalism’ but also Frantz Fanon’s (1970) thesis that
colonialism underdeveloped the personality of the colonized.
He owed even more to Andre Gunder Frank and theorists
of Latin American dependency, whose analyses and insights
were now systematically applied to Africa. They built upon
Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism (1965),
where Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah, argued
that the fruits of African political independence had been
denied by continuing economic dependence on the former
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colonial powers. Dependency writers stressed not only the
external orientation of African economies, which constrained
the prospects for internal growth, but also how such ‘underdevelopment’ underlay the political power of the emergent
African bourgeoisies – the principal beneficiaries of ‘neocolonialism’. Even where, as in Nyerere’s Tanzania, there
were attempts to ‘de-link’ from metropolitan capitalism by
pursuit of socialist strategies, state control of the economy
translated into the development of a ‘bureaucratic bourgeoisie’ whose interests contradicted those of workers and
peasants, who were accordingly exhorted to engage in class
struggle (Shivji 1976). Elsewhere, the lack of an indigenous
entrepreneurial class with access to investment capital still
required that development be directed by the state, as in
Kenya for example.
While dependency theory and Marxism contributed much
to the understanding of the patterns of African development
and ‘periphery capitalism’, they posed as many questions as
they solved, not least because of their inability to delineate
realistic alternative paths to development. Although there
was an implied socialist alternative, it was difficult to
demonstrate the existence in Africa of the indigenous social
and economic forces that would carry such a revolution
through. Instead, throughout the 1970s and 1980s, African
countries were more typically dominated by ruling classes
whose material interests were determined primarily by preferential access to the state. By the mid-1980s the population
of sub-Saharan Africa was, on average, considerably poorer
than it had been a decade earlier. Twenty-five of the world’s
severely indebted low-income countries were in Africa, the
continent was unable to feed itself, and AIDs was spreading
rapidly, possibly affecting up to a third of the population in
middle Africa. The bane of African national development
was, then, not the emergence of a dominant class as such,
but its parasitic character, supported by a ‘swollen state’.
This swollen (or ‘overdeveloped’) state was also, by its
nature, inherently authoritarian. On the one hand, colonial
experience and post-colonial contestations had left African
countries bereft of institutions (effective political oppositions, a free media, functioning constitutions) capable of
countering abuse of power and ensuring administrative
accountability. On the other, the centrality of the state to
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resource allocation had encouraged a concentration of political power that typically saw personalized regimes ruling
by a mix of coercion and clientelism – the granting of
rewards and favours to particular supporters irrespective of
the laws and regulations concerning public conduct.
Democratization in Africa: the second wave
The early 1990s witnessed a dramatic return of multi-party
democracy to Africa. Whereas ‘in 1989 29 African countries
were governed under some kind of single-party constitution, and one-party rule seemed entrenched as the modal
form of governance’, by 1994 ‘not a single de jure one-party
rule remained’ (Bratton and de Walle 1997: 8). This was
widely perceived as the local manifestation of Huntington’s
(1991) third wave of democracy globally. Many authors have
stressed the increasing importance of political conditionality
attached to foreign assistance and the emergence of Western demands for ‘good governance’ in contributing (with
more or less effect) towards this democratic momentum.
Yet although the surge of popular power in eastern Europe
probably did much to undermine the legitimacy of oneparty and authoritarian African regimes, there is a consensus
of radical and mainstream opinion that internal forces in
the form of the rise of pro-democracy movements, not
external pressures, were most fundamental.
Study of ‘watershed elections’ demonstrates how protest
movements incorporated key segments of African populations (students, trade unionists, professionals, intellectuals,
some business interests, the media, women, the urban poor,
small farmers and the churches) and how their demands for
democracy were resisted by the ruling group, their business
associates and often, their external allies (on France see, for
example, Renou 2002). In apartheid South Africa especially,
the combination of mass protest, declining regime legitimacy, and economic failure was widely seen as creating divisions between so-called ‘hard-liner’ and ‘soft-liner’ elites,
propelling them towards multi-partyism and democratic
transition. Yet political transformation in Africa at this time
was both widespread and extremely uneven. A residual group
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of states were largely untouched by the process, either
because multi-partyism was well-established (Botswana) or
because demands for reform were too weak (Zimbabwe and
Swaziland). In a third group of states armed rebellions engineered the overthrow of repressive regimes with the hope
of representative government to come (Uganda, Eritrea and
Ethiopia). And in a fourth group, state collapse saw central
institutions disintegrate under the weight of looting, communal violence and civil war (Liberia, Sierra Leone, Zaire/
Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo-Brazzaville) or fall
victim to the predations of rival warlords (Chad, Somalia).
Despite this unevenness, democratization was rapidly
to become the central preoccupation of academic observers
and engaged activists during the 1990s, spanning the
ideological divide between mainstream liberal and radical/
Marxist analyses, because for both it offered significant hope
of a better future for Africa. Yet there were, inevitably,
important differences of interpretation and emphasis with
regard to, in particular: first, elections, electoral systems
and constitutionalism; and second, the relationship between
democratization and development.
Elections, electoral systems and constitutionalism
Very considerable attention has been devoted to the study
of elections, and not least in the period 1950–65 when electoral procedures were used to determine, or at least to
legitimate, ‘the form, rate and direction of the decolonization
process’ (Cohen 1983: 73). Later, as Cohen (1983) notes, the
tendency for military regimes to create ruling parties and
then to stage façade elections (Zaire, Togo, Benin, Sudan)
testifies to rulers’ recognition of the legitimation function
of elections. And the re-establishment of constitutions providing for elections in post-military Ghana (1969 and 1979),
Nigeria (1979), Uganda (1980), Upper Volta (1978–80) and
the Central African Republic (1980–81), as well as multipartyisms’s re-introduction in Senegal (1976) indicated the
continuing faith of some elites in the utility of elections.
But the unevenness of Africa’s electoral experience created
a valuable distinction between categories of elections (competitive, semi-competitive and non-competitive) (Chazan
1979). Even so, overall, the shift to one-partyism and militarism led to a declining academic emphasis upon electoralism;
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most scholars transferred their attentions to the state, class,
imperialism and underdevelopment.
Africa’s second wave of democracy re-ignited enthusiasm
for the study of individual elections (see for example Daniel,
Southall and Szeftel 1999). Cohen (1983) illustrated how,
during Africa’s first wave, analysts’ theoretical concerns dealt
principally with voter choice (overwhelmingly, the extent
to which choice was based upon ethnicity), voter turnout
(notably whether regime restrictions on political competition increased voter dissatisfaction or political alienation),
and political participation (the role of elections in legitimating regimes and/or entrenching their domestic political
control). These issues still retained some prominence, but
in the 1990s analysts became more concerned to locate
elections in the context of contemporary ‘transition theory’
– in turn heavily influenced by O’Donnell, Schmitter and
Whitehead (1986). Apart from seeking to understand the
causes of transitions and the variable rates of progress,
major emphasis was also now placed upon the conditions
for making successful transitions sustainable. Akin to the
‘new institutionalism’ interest in similar issues elsewhere,
this resulted in renewed interest in both electoral systems
and constitutionalism.
Africa’s electoral systems were in large measure inherited
from the colonial powers. Traditionally, Francophone countries have elected their rulers by systems of proportional representation (PR), Anglophone countries by plurality systems.
Whereas for Francophone countries this usually involved
parallel elections for parliaments and presidents, most
Anglophone countries started with borrowed Westminsterstyle parliamentary systems before subsequently (in moves
that reflected a growing centralization of power and a weakening of legislative checks upon executives) introducing
separate presidential elections. This historical divide remains
largely intact. Even so, significant debate has taken place
concerning the qualities of different electoral systems, for
two reasons. The first is that scholars, democratic activists
and international agencies are seriously interested in how
to prevent the abuse of elections by politicians, by means
such as electoral monitoring (see Daniel and Southall 1999).
A second spur has been the specific electoral requirements
of South Africa’s transition from apartheid to democracy.
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On South Africa, a seminal contribution concerning an
appropriate electoral system to best overcome the legacy of
apartheid in an ideologically and ethnically divided society
was Horowitz (1991), which argued for the adoption of an
Alternative Vote (AV) system. A plurality system would
lead to overrepresentation of a winning party, and national
list PR would disconnect individual representatives from
voters and effectively exclude ethnic groups not represented
in a putative majority coalition (Horowitz 1991: 200). In
contrast, AV would produce majority rather than coalition
governments, by encouraging vote pooling and ethnic accommodation – parties would be forced to attract the second or
third (party) preferences of voters. ‘AV does not stand in the
way of majoritarianism, but makes majorities responsive to
the interests of others as well. This is an important conciliatory feature – and one that builds legitimacy – in a divided
society’ (Horowitz 1991: 202). In the event, South Africa
opted for national list PR on the grounds of simplicity,
inclusivity and the fact that no votes would be ‘wasted’.
(The adoption of PR as a way of easing the transition to
democracy in Namibia in 1989 was also influential here.)
This was of major significance, in that it represented a move
away from Westminster-style, ‘winner–takes–all’ majoritarianism in favour of an electoral system that provides for
the inclusion of minorities, which in South Africa’s case
are based primarily on ethnicity and race. Furthermore, it
fuelled important comparative work by Reynolds (1999),
who, after studying elections under plurality and PR systems in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, and in Namibia
and South Africa respectively came out strongly for PR as
more likely to foster power-sharing and inter-ethnic accommodation. In contrast, plurality systems were more likely
to foster majoritarianism and ethnic polarization. The
drawbacks of the plurality system were to be demonstrated
in Lesotho’s elections of 1993 and 1998, which led to the
exclusion of opposition parties from the parliament despite
their gaining a sizeable share of the vote. Lesotho moved to
adopt a mixed member proportional system in consequence.
And South Africa is now considering the merits of the reintroduction of constituency elections for at least a number
of its MPs, so as to establish a firmer connection between
voters and their representatives.
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As much as the debate about electoral systems has transcended academe to become an increasingly significant
issue in contemporary African politics, there is widespread
recognition of the need to locate any electoral system in
a wider historical and institutional context. For instance,
both theoretical and empirical work has concluded that the
combination of a PR electoral system with a parliamentary,
rather than a presidential, form of government is most likely
to enhance the prospects for democracy in Africa (Southall
1999). Meanwhile Darnolf (1997) ascribes the presence
of a democratic culture in Botswana and its absence in
Zimbabwe to the sharply contrasting nature of their decolonization experiences – Botswana’s peaceful negotiations with
the departing colonial authority providing a basis for acceptance of diversity and opposition, versus Zimbabwe’s bloody
liberation struggle, which fostered political intolerance and
distrust of opposition.
Such an appreciation of the historical legacies characterizes the revived interest in constitutions, central to the
shaping and study of Africa’s multiple transitions. These
transitions have varied considerably, but one of the most
influential models was the national conference, pioneered
in Benin in 1990 and later adopted in Cameroon, Togo, and
Niger, where reluctant rulers were forced to concede the
re-drawing of constitutions and the formulation of new rules
for multi-party elections (Joseph 1991). Although equivalent processes have been variously waylaid or avoided by
authoritarian leaders elsewhere, the idea that rulers should
forge a contract with the ruled and craft a new beginning
has become widespread. Indeed, because prominent African
political scientists and other intellectuals have been intimately engaged in democratization struggles they have had
to confront the democratic potential offered by different
institutional arrangements and consider if there is a sound
basis for rendering constitutions viable. For many, this has
been difficult, for the previously predominant Marxian perspective saw Africa’s constitutions having fallen foul of what
Okoth-Ogendo (1991) terms ‘the power map’ (whereby state
elites appropriated themselves unfettered discretion over
public affairs). In contrast, the new constitution-making
tended to be dominated by a liberal paradigm that rested
upon the twin pillars of limited government and individual
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rights and freedoms. As Shivji (1991: 258) wryly observed,
that paradigm required Marxists and Leninists to direct their
analytical skills to upholding the positions of the liberal
thinkers Montesquieu and Locke! An important outcome
of the resulting debate has been a critique of liberalism
and ‘good governance’ discourse as legitimating the right
of Western powers to intervene in Africa whilst shielding
the ‘democratic’ West from scrutiny. In turn, that has been
linked to an insistence that for constitutionalism to take
root in Africa it must recognize not only socio-economic
rights but also collective rights, notably those of internally
oppressed peoples (Shivji 1991: 256). This provides something of a linkage to the important debate, in the South
African context, of the potential of consociationalism.
Democratization and development
The concern to render constitutionalism viable has been
closely linked to debates around the complex interrelationships between democratization and development.
Demands for democratization arrived later in Africa than
the implementation of Structural Adjustment Programmes
(SAPs), introduced by the Bretton Woods institutions in the
1980s in a bid to restructure economies, by reducing the
‘swollen state’. By the early 1990s SAPs had been joined by
a democratization agenda that called for the replacement
of one-party and military regimes by multipartyism and
freely elected governments. This linkage between externallyinduced economic and political reform was explicit, the core
of the argument being that democracy was not, in practice,
to be found in the absence of capitalism. Such a position
has proved immensely troubling for radical Africanists, many
of whom are still having to come to terms with the collapse
of the socialist model internationally.
The standard response has been twofold. First, the
orthodox western-institutional position has been regularly
taken to task for defining democracy in minimalist terms,
that is, in terms of the existence of free elections and multipartyism. This is routinely condemned as an extremely
impoverished version of democracy. The importance of
fundamental liberal freedoms cannot be denied; but they are
not likely to mean much to the mass of African populations
who live in dire poverty. This critique has been greatly
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strengthened by examples such as Moi’s Kenya, where multipartyism failed to curb rampant corruption and the continued gross abuse of human rights, and Musuveni’s Uganda,
where a ban on political parties is tolerated by Western
‘donors’ because of the proclaimed successful implementation of structural adjustment. Such cases merely indicate
what many observers are convinced has become more
obvious – the severe limitations of liberal democracy ‘in
crisis-ridden, dislocated, marginalized, and impoverished
economies’ (Ihonvbere 2000: 187). The solution, regularly
proposed, is for African societies to become yet more democratic, for pro-democracy movements to base themselves
more thoroughly upon civil society, trade unions, and human
rights groups and so on to force through a more thoroughgoing reformulation of the state. ‘This will include a restructuring of the military, a transformation of the bureaucracy,
a revitalization of the judiciary, constitutional engineering,
the guarantee of basic rights and liberties, and the protection of minority rights’ (Ihonvbere 2000: 188).
Romantically, perhaps, ‘democratization’ has come to
replace ‘revolution’ as the radical panacea. However, analytically the debate may be said to have bifurcated into a
struggle between the two poles of ‘liberal democracy’ and
‘popular democracy’ (Saul 1997). On the one hand, the ‘political science of democratization’, typified by the work of
American political scientists like Larry Diamond and Samuel
Huntington, is based ultimately upon the political elitism
of Joseph Schumpeter and the American theorists of ‘polyarchy’ such as Robert Dahl. Market economies develop,
while state-socialist economies fall behind. For democratic
reforms to proceed without provoking crisis, the costs to
privileged economic interests must not exceed the benefits.
Competing elites therefore have a formative role to play in
crafting ‘pacts’, whilst disruptive popular pressures need to
be contained. In contrast, the ‘political economy of democratization’ argues that such a focus on ‘low-intensity democracy’ abandons the pursuit of public purpose and fetishizes
the market. In Africa, market reforms have undermined the
capacity of states to manage economies in accordance with
social, ethical and political priorities. By destroying indigenous industries and domestic employment they have accentuated social tensions. Ironically, therefore, globalization
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and structural adjustment undermine rather than develop a
basis for democratic peace and state-building.
Saul’s (1997) very influential article argues that the proponents of the ‘political science of democratization’, along
with the World Bank and fellow donors, have increasingly
come to appreciate this paradox, and have accordingly resorted to a ‘political science of development’ which stresses
‘good governance’. This recognizes the need for viable statelike structures to maintain a minimum of order and legitimacy, and in effect to balance the contradictory pressures
of political opening and economic reform, of managing dual
transitions. Yet such approaches tend to downplay the socioeconomic policy content that such models are designed to
ensure: ‘governance’ is presented as ‘performance-oriented’,
akin to business management, designed in effect to contain
disruptive popular pressures that might inhibit economic
‘progress’. The emphasis that such an approach places on
holding the state to account and constructing democratic
institutions capable of containing communal differences
(‘statecraft’) are clearly vital (as is demonstrated by the
collapse of social cohesion in countries like Rwanda and
Somalia). But they can only go so far in humanizing Africa’s
contradictions, so long as the economic landscape remains
so ‘fertile’ for throwing up ‘pathological deformations’. In
these circumstances it remains impossible to disentangle the
twin issues of ‘capitalism and socialism’ and ‘liberty and
dictatorship’. While the possibility of realizing socialism
looks remote, demands for democracy and equality whose
realization will require progressive social and economic
reorganization are rising in country after country, and in
the long term have to hold out hope for Africa.
Africanists are understandably less concerned with exploring the general relationships between economic development and democratization that attract much interest in
contemporary comparative politics and, even, among some
economists (see Chapter 3 of this book, by Addison). As the
literature tends to associate democracy with national wealth
(albeit with important qualifications), it makes depressing
reading for anyone concerned with the poorest continent
and invites pessimistic long-term prognoses of individual
cases like South Africa, widely touted as Africa’s best hope
for progress (see Lane and Ersson 1997). Saul’s visionary
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perspective therefore articulates a radical optimism that for
many engaged scholars constitutes an intellectual and political necessity. The broader consensus, however, argues that,
given limited prospects for successful developmental states
in Africa, liberal democracy currently constitutes the only
attractive option, notwithstanding its obvious limitations.
Conclusion: the way forward
Wiseman (1999) advances the grounds for ‘demo-optimism’
in Africa. Obstacles to democracy in Africa remain legion,
and democratic progress is highly uneven, yet the continent’s
political systems are, overall, more pluralistic and more
open than they were before 1990. And democracy remains
on the agenda because there is no plausible alternative. The
debates outlined above will carry on. But alongside that,
‘demo-optimism’ might be reinforced by taking the analysis
further forward in the following three directions.
First, there is need for more extensive concern with democratic accountability. At one level, this will require greater
attention to the concept and practice of political opposition, a dimension of democratization that has been largely
subsumed under studies of political transition. However,
establishment of the idea of opposition as legitimate, of
oppositions as alternative governments, and of opposition
as a vehicle for movement away from a politics of communalism towards a politics of ideas is central to continued
momentum towards democracy in Africa (Southall 2001).
At another level, there is growing urgency for the quality of
democracy, and how it can be measured, to be investigated.
Baker (2000) has argued for the expansion of conventional
notions of accountability (revolving around popular judgements of politicians at the poll) to embrace rendering all
those who make significant societal decisions (private or
public) accountable to their relevant communities. All
public power-wielding bodies, legal authorities and security
forces, private power-wielding bodies (from corporations
to churches), individual citizens (such as large investors),
international legal and political bodies like the Organization
of African Unity, and international financial institutions
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should be scrutinized more closely. Measures for assessing
the accountability of all such bodies are either available or
can be developed, even though they will have to be supplemented by qualitative judgements. Their results will both
allow for systematic cross-country comparison and more
importantly can be utilized to strengthen and reinforce the
accountability of power-holders who affect the lives of ordinary citizens.
A second, related effort should be upon expansion of
the study of participatory democracy in Africa. Both the
cross-national study of political transitions and individual
case-studies have often been divorced from examination of
grass-roots level political participation. Focus upon democratization at national level has neglected the implications
for local government, even though in many countries this
is where ‘delivery’, whether by national government, ‘donors’
or non-governmental organizations, has to be implemented.
In contrast to voluminous writing and theorizing about ‘civil
society’ and its centrality to democratization, there have
been relatively few systematic studies of what ordinary, poor,
African people understand by ‘democracy’ and how they
view their rulers. In this regard, Cherry’s work on African
political participation in Kwazakele township in Port Elizabeth (1999), carried out over nearly ten years and spanning
the transition from the apartheid struggle to the present
day remains seminal. Significantly, she demonstrates the
co-existence within popular consciousness of a joyous embrace of liberal democracy and confusion when it comes to
people’s experience of the institutions of direct democracy
(both party and municipal). Unrealized hopes of participatory democracy have led to growing cynicism and political
demobilization, posing long-term dangers to the rooting of
democracy in South Africa.
Finally, there is greater need for elucidation of the interconnection between democratization and globalization in
Africa. Far too often the response of African intellectuals
to the impact of globalization has simply been one of rage.
Hyslop (1999) protests that this is a product of a simplistic
(and fashionable) notion of globalization as merely the
latest stage of the expansion of capitalist production. Yet
the expansion of communications and information systems,
changing experiences of time and space, and massive cultural
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changes towards new social forms that collapse any distinction between ‘modernity’ and ‘tradition’ compete as contenders with the economic for the title of being the driving
forces of globalization. African rhetoric, looking back to the
autarkic logic of dependency theory, only intensifies the
continent’s marginalization. Instead, the way forward must
be for African struggles against external economic domination, militarism, state repression and cultural imperialisms
to link up with similar struggles elsewhere. Cheru (1996)
admits that in the African context there is much hard
work to be undertaken by social movements in developing
a counter-project to current oppressions, yet this is vital if
Africa is to participate in international moves towards shaping ‘a just, democratic and sustainable new world order’.
Africa’s internal politics clearly need to be democratized,
yet there is a growing consensus that this goal goes hand
in hand with growing demands for the transformation of a
global distribution of power and wealth that is fundamentally undemocratic.
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