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Growing Opposition in Zimbabwe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2021
Extract
A realignment of economic interests in Zimbabwe is fueling broad-based demands for an open, democratic, multiparty society. The shift in alignment comes as a result of the ruling party’s failure to meet the needs and expectations of the majority of Zimbabweans in the eleven years since independence. Under the leadership of the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), headed by President Robert Mugabe, the government adopted socialism guided by Marxist-Leninist principles as its ideological philosophy. The socialist agenda, coupled with cumbersome, centralized decision-making by a bloated bureaucracy, discouraged domestic and foreign investment and stymied employment growth.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © African Studies Association 1991
Footnotes
Virginia Curtin Knight, a contributing editor to Current History magazine, is a free-lance journalist living and working in Zimbabwe.
References
Notes
1. Ncube, Welshman, “Constitutionalism, Democracy and Political Practice in Zimbabwe,” in Mandaza, Ibbo and Sachikonye, Lloyd, eds.. The One Party State and Democracy, Harare, Southern African Political Economy Trust, 1991, p. 166 Google Scholar.
2. Jonathan Moyo, “The Dialectics of National Unity and Democracy in Zimbabwe,” ibid., pp. 90-91.
3. “Role of Political Affairs Ministry Clarified,” The Herald (Harare), May 4, 1991.
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