The class of 1990: How have the autocratic leaders of sub- Saharan Africa fared under democratisation?
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Third World Quarterly
- Vol. 19 (1) , 115-127
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01436599814550
Abstract
The movements of political protest, competitive elections and the installation of new regimes are widely regarded as the most significant political upheaval to shake Africa since political independence. The impression is often given that this transformation has also seen the sweeping away of the old guard of autocratic leaders. The image of renewed leadership does not however correspond with reality. Taking the leaders that were in office in 1990 at the beginning of the democratisation movement, the article traces their subsequent history. It finds that half still hold the highest office, having for the most part successfully transformed themselves into 'democratic' leaders. This remarkable success story is examined, for the purpose of this article, from a voluntarist perspective, that is, the tactics that the incumbents pursued so as to remain in office are the focus. Continuing in the tradition of Sandbrook, and Jackson and Rosberg's work on 'personal rule',1 it constitutes a primer on how to hang on to power against the odds.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Democratization in Africa after 1989: Comparative and Theoretical PerspectivesComparative Politics, 1997
- Deciphering Africa's Divergent TransitionsPolitical Science Quarterly, 1997
- Bleak Future for Multi-Party Elections in KenyaThe Journal of Modern African Studies, 1996
- THE GHANAIAN ELECTIONS OF 1992—A DISSENTING VIEWAfrican Affairs, 1995
- Democratisation in Sub‐Saharan AfricaSurvival, 1993
- Kenya: Lessons From a Flawed ElectionJournal of Democracy, 1993
- Africa's Troubled TransitionsJournal of Democracy, 1992
- Popular Protest and Political Reform in AfricaComparative Politics, 1992
- Political adjustment or domestic pressure: Democratic politics and political choice in AfricaThird World Quarterly, 1992