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Shop windows and smoke-filled rooms: governance and the re-politicisation of Tanzania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2002

Tim Kelsall
Affiliation:
Lecturer in African Politics, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The author wishes to thank The Nuffield Foundation, which provided a small grant for research in Tanzania between June and September 2001. He also thanks Geir Sundet, Graham Harrison, Sara Rich and two anonymous referees for comments on the paper, the limitations of which are all his own.

Abstract

In the 1970s politics in Tanzania was substantially a bureaucratic affair. Since the 1980s, however, economic liberalisation, multiparty democracy and governance reforms have on the one hand introduced measures conducive to building a legal-rational bureaucracy and a liberal civil society, and on the other accelerated political struggle for economic resources through personalised regional networks. Paraphrasing Emmanuel Terray, the first trend is described in this article as the manufacture of ‘air-conditioned’ politics, the second as the growth of ‘veranda’ politics. The article argues that donor reforms are not leading in a straight line to liberal governance, but neither is civil society simply being colonised by patrimonial networks. Rather, both ‘air-conditioned’ politics and ‘veranda’ politics are advancing simultaneously, inundating a previously bureaucratised political sphere. The dual character of this ‘re-politicisation’ makes the fate of governance reforms exceedingly difficult to predict.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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