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6 - Africa: Transitions without Democratization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Steven Levitsky
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
Lucan A. Way
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
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Summary

“It is better to be President in a nondemocratic country than not to be President in a democratic one.”

– Advisor to Frederick Chiluba, President of Zambia

This chapter examines 14 competitive authoritarian regimes in Africa. The African cases share several features in common. First, they lacked favorable conditions for democracy. Nearly all of them were poor, rural, and had small middle classes and weak civil societies. Notwithstanding episodes of mass protest in some cases, large or sustained democracy movements were rare. Second, most African states faced an external environment characterized by high leverage and low linkage. Sub-Saharan African states were among the weakest and most dependent in the world, and the disappearance of competing Western security interests after the Cold War brought a sharp increase in external democratizing pressure. In 1990, the United States, United Kingdom, and France announced that future aid to Africa would be linked to democratic and human-rights performance. The new political conditionality had a major impact: The number of de jure single-party regimes in the region fell from 29 in 1989 to zero in 1994.

At the same time, transitions took place in a context of low linkage. Africa's economic ties to the West were minimal, and information flows to and from the region were limited. In the early 1990s, Africa had the lowest density of telephone lines in the world, lacked virtually any internet connections, and was “severely underrepresented” in transnational human-rights networks.

Type
Chapter
Information
Competitive Authoritarianism
Hybrid Regimes after the Cold War
, pp. 236 - 308
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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