This article explores a hitherto overlooked consequence of regime change in Africa. It shows how the shift from one-party to multiparty rule in the region altered the kinds of ethnic cleavages that structure political competition and conflict. The article demonstrates how the different strategic logics of political competition in one-party and multiparty settings create incentives for political actors to emphasize different kinds of ethnic identities: local-level identities (usually revolving around tribe or clan) in one-party elections and broader scale identities (usually revolving around region, language, or religion) in multiparty elections. The argument is illustrated with evidence from the 1991 and 1992 regime transitions in Zambia an...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators and legislatures than Joel Barkan...
Why has the electoral process in the newly democratised African states had such limited impacts? How...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators, and legislatures than Joel Barka...
This dissertation examines the nature of party competition in the African democracies. Political par...
This dissertation examines the nature of party competition in the African democracies. Political par...
Formulating ethnic wedge issues is an important, yet overlooked, strategy for cross-ethnic mobilizat...
The shift from one-party to multiparty politics in many African countries has made the issue of demo...
The death of President Levy Mwanawasa in August 2008 plunged Zambian politics into a state of flux. ...
In this article we analyse the changes in the party system in Zambia in the period 1991 to 2001. Bas...
Our paper addresses one of the key issues that confront emerging democracies in Africa: how can we e...
Zambia's record of democracy in the 1990s has been much criticized, at home and abroad. The governme...
This dissertation explains why certain African politicians are able to create ethnic votingblocs whe...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators and legislatures than Joel Barkan...
Why has the electoral process in the newly democratised African states had such limited impacts? How...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators, and legislatures than Joel Barka...
This dissertation examines the nature of party competition in the African democracies. Political par...
This dissertation examines the nature of party competition in the African democracies. Political par...
Formulating ethnic wedge issues is an important, yet overlooked, strategy for cross-ethnic mobilizat...
The shift from one-party to multiparty politics in many African countries has made the issue of demo...
The death of President Levy Mwanawasa in August 2008 plunged Zambian politics into a state of flux. ...
In this article we analyse the changes in the party system in Zambia in the period 1991 to 2001. Bas...
Our paper addresses one of the key issues that confront emerging democracies in Africa: how can we e...
Zambia's record of democracy in the 1990s has been much criticized, at home and abroad. The governme...
This dissertation explains why certain African politicians are able to create ethnic votingblocs whe...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
What keeps politicians together in a political party? Shared ideologies and policy goals go far towa...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators and legislatures than Joel Barkan...
Why has the electoral process in the newly democratised African states had such limited impacts? How...
Few scholars have taught us more about African voters, legislators, and legislatures than Joel Barka...