Africa and The Decline of The Democracy Debate

Szerzők

  • Mohamed Salih Erasmus University Rotterdam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15170/AT.2021.15.4.1

Kulcsszavak:

democracy, African state, governance, patrimonialism, deliberation

Absztrakt

The debate on the decline of democracy is not new. It can be traced to the period between the First and Second World Wars, and it resurfaced during the 1970s, followed by the most spectacular dem- ocratic resurgence in human history. This lecture focuses on the current debate on the decline of democracy and downward trends in major democracy assessment indices. Africa is among the three least democratic world regions, with 42% of African countries cur- rently designated as not free.

Measuring the decline or rise of democracy only by the perfor- mance of institutional politics does not provide a complete picture of the issue. Institutional politics does not account for the resil- ience and thriving new spaces where democratic vibrancy and civic engagement prevail. Examples from African countries demonstrate that democracy indices based on institutional politics alone do not account for alternative democratic spaces and practices. This paper is the edited version of the keynote speech delivered by the author at the 6th Pécs African Studies Conference under the theme “African Realities: Conflict and Cooperation”, September 23-24, 2021 – University of Pécs, Hungary.

Információk a szerzőről

Mohamed Salih, Erasmus University Rotterdam

Phd in Economics and Social Science, University of Manchester, Uk Emeritus Professor of Politics of Development at The International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam in The Netherlands

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Megjelent

2021-12-16

Hogyan kell idézni

Salih, M. (2021). Africa and The Decline of The Democracy Debate. Afrika Tanulmányok / Hungarian Journal of African Studies, 15(4), 5–15. https://doi.org/10.15170/AT.2021.15.4.1