Party defections have increasingly become a major trend of Ugandan multiparty politics, not only for individual elites at the national level and in the parties’ leadership but at the grassroots level by local party members too. These shifts of allegiance are now systematically part of the staging and imagery of President Museveni’s electoral campaigns. A common explanation of this phenomenon points at the inconsistency of partisan loyalties and ideologies. It is often taken for granted that defections are expressions of clientelism, political opportunism and above all democratic immaturity and a misunderstanding of multipartyism. This paper argues on the contrary that mass defections reflect the social technology of the National Resistance ...
Electoral Rules and Leader Selection: Experimental Evidence from Ugandan Community Groups. Despite a...
since the 1980s have received international recognition. This perception has largely been based on i...
Hegemonic party regimes are non-democratic regimes that (1) rule with the aid of a dominant politica...
Following Uganda’s 2005 multiparty transition, observers expected the country’s legislature – an unu...
In the wake of President Museveni’s latest election victory in Uganda, this article provides a criti...
This article addresses a question relevant to many non-democratic regimes: how can a successful domi...
This thesis studies the authoritarian dominant party system in Uganda during the 2016 general electi...
Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Movement took power in Uganda in 1986 and established what it ...
In the mid-1980s, the National Resistance Movement (NRM) established in Uganda what it claimed was a...
This paper is an ethnographic study of the National Resistance Movement Party primaries that took pl...
This study traces the development of political parties and local governments in Uganda. It then exam...
A dominant narrative exists in the literature concerning the financial strategy of the National Resi...
This paper examines new forms of leadership that have developed in the latter part of the twentieth ...
Most recent elections in African countries have been characterized by external persuasion by donor c...
Uganda has been considered one of Africa's few "success stories" over the past decade, an example of...
Electoral Rules and Leader Selection: Experimental Evidence from Ugandan Community Groups. Despite a...
since the 1980s have received international recognition. This perception has largely been based on i...
Hegemonic party regimes are non-democratic regimes that (1) rule with the aid of a dominant politica...
Following Uganda’s 2005 multiparty transition, observers expected the country’s legislature – an unu...
In the wake of President Museveni’s latest election victory in Uganda, this article provides a criti...
This article addresses a question relevant to many non-democratic regimes: how can a successful domi...
This thesis studies the authoritarian dominant party system in Uganda during the 2016 general electi...
Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Movement took power in Uganda in 1986 and established what it ...
In the mid-1980s, the National Resistance Movement (NRM) established in Uganda what it claimed was a...
This paper is an ethnographic study of the National Resistance Movement Party primaries that took pl...
This study traces the development of political parties and local governments in Uganda. It then exam...
A dominant narrative exists in the literature concerning the financial strategy of the National Resi...
This paper examines new forms of leadership that have developed in the latter part of the twentieth ...
Most recent elections in African countries have been characterized by external persuasion by donor c...
Uganda has been considered one of Africa's few "success stories" over the past decade, an example of...
Electoral Rules and Leader Selection: Experimental Evidence from Ugandan Community Groups. Despite a...
since the 1980s have received international recognition. This perception has largely been based on i...
Hegemonic party regimes are non-democratic regimes that (1) rule with the aid of a dominant politica...