Belfer Center Home > Publications > Articles and Op-Eds > Op-Eds > Is Africa Losing its Taste for Democracy?

EmailEmail   PrintPrint Bookmark and Share

 
"Is Africa Losing its Taste for Democracy?"

UN police stand guard outside the Golf Hotel, where Ivory Coast opposition leader Alassane Ouattara has attempted to govern while incumbent Laurent Gbagbo rules from the presidential palace in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Dec. 16, 2010.
AP Photo

"Is Africa Losing its Taste for Democracy?"

Op-Ed, The Huffington Post

December 16, 2010

Author: John F. McCauley, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program/Initiative on Religion in International Affairs, 2010–2011

Belfer Center Programs or Projects: International Security; Religion in International Affairs

 

The recent failed election in Cote d'Ivoire, which has generated competing claims to the presidency and a high risk of return to widespread violence, is the latest in a series of electoral setbacks in sub-Saharan Africa. Coming on the heels of significant democratic progress during the 1990s, Africans and international advocates for democracy are now left to ask: does democratization promise an enduring advance in political participation and fairness in Africa, or is it nothing more than a leadership experiment on the wane?

In 2007, Daniel Posner and Daniel Young compiled data on how African leaders have left office since the beginning of Independence. What they found was a remarkable embrace of democratic norms between the 1980s and 2000s: prior to that period, less than 30 percent of leaders left office through regular means (natural death, voluntary resignation, or electoral defeat), yet by 2005 that figure had soared to over 80 percent. Indeed, sub-Saharan African leaders had come to behave remarkably similarly to leaders from the rest of the world. Since that report, however, political leaders have ignored electoral defeat to remain in power in Kenya and Zimbabwe; coups have toppled governments in Guinea, Madagascar, and Niger; and the Central African Republic has postponed elections. Now Cote d'Ivoire, a once prosperous and proud nation that has undergone a decade of turmoil, has ensured its place on the list of African states whose leaders fail to relinquish power democratically....

Continue reading: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-mccauley/is-africa-losing-its-tast_b_797847.html

 

For more information about this publication please contact the Belfer Center Communications Office at 617-495-9858.

Full text of this publication is available at:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-mccauley/is-africa-losing-its-tast_b_797847.h
tml

For Academic Citation:

McCauley, John F. "Is Africa Losing its Taste for Democracy?." The Huffington Post, December 16, 2010.

Bookmark and Share

"Kenya's Real Problem (It's Not Ethnic)"
By M. Steven Fish and Matthew Kroenig

"Power House"
By Matthew Kroenig

"Re-Plan Colombia"
By Sarah Zukerman Daly

SUBSCRIBE

Receive email updates on the most pressing topics in international affairs and science.

<em>International Security</em>

The spring 2013 issue of the quarterly journal International Security is now available!

Events Calendar

We host a busy schedule of events throughout the fall, winter and spring. Past guests include: UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, former Vice President Al Gore, and former Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev.