Dispelling the myths on African politics

13 Mar, 2020 - 00:03 0 Views

The ManicaPost

Although much of the media attention on Africa highlights conflict, such as the crises in the Central Africa Republic and in South Sudan, civil conflict in Africa is on the decline. Scott Straus at University of Wisconsin wrote in 2012:

“Contrary to common assumption, major forms of large-scale organised political violence in sub-Saharan Africa are declining in frequency and intensity, and the region is not uniquely prone to the onset of warfare.”

Voter turn-out

Looking at the most recent elections, voter turnout is similar in the average African country (66 percent) to turnout in the United States (67 percent). There is quite a range, however.

The lowest turnout in the most recent presidential election was in Liberia (37 percent) and the highest was in its neighbour, Sierra Leone (91 percent). Analysis of voter turnout in Africa’s multiparty regimes suggests some of the same political institutions that influence turnout in developed democracies also influence turnout in new democracies in Africa.

Women empowerment

Parliaments in Africa have greater representation of women than the U.S Congress. As Aili Tripp (also at University of Wisconsin) wrote late last year:

“… today Rwandan women hold 64 percent of the country’s legislative seats. In Senegal, Seychelles and South Africa, more than 40 percent of parliamentary seats are held by women, while in Mozambique, Angola, Tanzania and Uganda over 35 percent of seats are occupied by women. By contrast, women in the US hold 18 percent of the seats in the House and 20 percent in the Senate.”

The number of female cabinet ministers and the importance of their portfolios are also increasing in Africa, particularly in Zimbabwe.

Vote buying

The standard narrative of voting in African countries focuses on candidates buying support from voters, but campaigns in Africa also mirror some American practices. For example, some African democracies have begun holding and televising presidential debates.

Kenya’s first presidential debate happened in 2013, and is fully available online, including Twitter hashtags and an in-set of a sign language interpreter. Malawi also slated three presidential debates in 2014 towards the May elections.

African funding

Remittances from abroad are projected to surpass foreign aid as the major source of external funds in African countries — so governments might adjust accordingly when forced to choose between the demands of donors and those of their expatriates. — washingtonpost.com

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