In the face of considerable scepticism from some British commentators, elections by secret ballot and adult suffrage emerged as central features of the end of British rule in Africa. This article considers the trajectories of electoral politics in three territories – Ghana (Gold Coast), Kenya, and Uganda. It shows that in each of these, the ballot box came to provide a point of convergence for the disparate ambitions of nationalist politicians, colonial policy-makers, and a hopeful, restive public: performing order, asserting maturity and equality, and staking a claim to prosperity. Late-colonial elections, we argue, constrained political possibility even as they offered citizenship, presenting the developmentalist state as the only possibl...
This article explores the paradoxical impact of democratisation on belonging in northern Ghana. It a...
During colonialism, African countries were exposed to severe living circumstances and human rights a...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...
In the face of considerable scepticism from some British commentators, elections by secret ballot an...
A large literature has described the years after independence from colonial rule as a period of ‘dep...
Abstract: A large literature has described the years after independence from colonial rule as a peri...
At the coast, the run-up to Kenya's 2013 elections was dominated by fears of violence and the calls ...
While British colonial rhetoric consistently identified tradition as the basis of legitimate authori...
This introduction interrogates the popular meaning attached to elections in a liberal democracy, whe...
The aim of this article is to assess the democratization process in Africa in general and the multi-...
Despite pre-election fears, the victory of the opposition NPP over the ruling NDC in Ghana’s Decembe...
This article explores the history of elections by secret ballot in Sudan since the 1950s, and consid...
In the late 1940s and 1950s, much of Whitehall and the British media’s rhetoric concerning the rate ...
This paper discusses the substance and potential impact of ethnic block voting in two of Ghana\u27s ...
In the months leading up to Kenya's general election in March 2013, there was much concern – both wi...
This article explores the paradoxical impact of democratisation on belonging in northern Ghana. It a...
During colonialism, African countries were exposed to severe living circumstances and human rights a...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...
In the face of considerable scepticism from some British commentators, elections by secret ballot an...
A large literature has described the years after independence from colonial rule as a period of ‘dep...
Abstract: A large literature has described the years after independence from colonial rule as a peri...
At the coast, the run-up to Kenya's 2013 elections was dominated by fears of violence and the calls ...
While British colonial rhetoric consistently identified tradition as the basis of legitimate authori...
This introduction interrogates the popular meaning attached to elections in a liberal democracy, whe...
The aim of this article is to assess the democratization process in Africa in general and the multi-...
Despite pre-election fears, the victory of the opposition NPP over the ruling NDC in Ghana’s Decembe...
This article explores the history of elections by secret ballot in Sudan since the 1950s, and consid...
In the late 1940s and 1950s, much of Whitehall and the British media’s rhetoric concerning the rate ...
This paper discusses the substance and potential impact of ethnic block voting in two of Ghana\u27s ...
In the months leading up to Kenya's general election in March 2013, there was much concern – both wi...
This article explores the paradoxical impact of democratisation on belonging in northern Ghana. It a...
During colonialism, African countries were exposed to severe living circumstances and human rights a...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...