Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
Prospects for political change figure prominently on the research agenda in sub-Saharan Africa, and in current debates within individual countries. Democracy is advocated not only as a goal in itself, since it is also frequently argued that elections and openness are required to make governments really responsive to the needs of the population and properly accountable for their actions. In addition, greater transparency is held to be necessary in order to make the public service behave in accordance with bureaucratic norms. Although the general principles of responsiveness, accountability, and transparency are embraced by a large number of scholars and observers of the African scene as a means of countering the detrimental effects of clientelism and personalistic rule, important nuances are found in the literature with regard to the way in which democracy is perceived to facilitate economic development in general, and presently needed reforms in particular.
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36 Ibid. and Harvey and Lewis, op. cit. p. 89.
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67 Estimates from the early 1970s presented by Harvey and Lewis, op. cit. p. 74, suggest that large cattle owners let peasants take care of between 10 and 20 per cent of the total national herd.
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69 Holm, 1987, loc. cit. pp. 125–7.
70 Picard, op. cit. p. 168.
71 Holm, loc. cit. For example, BDP candidates became ‘specially selected’ MPs after being defeated by the leader of the BNF in 1984 and 1989, respectively.
72 Ibid. pp. 45 and 47, Tables 8–9.
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