Democratization in Africa

POL2250.01
Course System Home Terms Spring 2017 Democratization in Africa

Course Description

Summary

Since the 1990s, a “third wave of democratization” has swept the African continent, leading to the unraveling, opening or liberalization of previously authoritarian (one‐party, military, and/or strongman) political regimes. But democratization in Africa has produced divergent outcomes, including remarkable success stories (Benin, Ghana, and Senegal, for example), major failures or setbacks (Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Zimbabwe), and ambiguous or precarious cases (Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Nigeria, Rwanda).   This course examines the achievements, complexities, contradictions, and uncertainties of democratic political reform in Africa. Readings, discussions, presentations and assignments will explore African democratization in theoretical and comparative perspective, alternative patterns and paths of transitions from authoritarianism, electoral competition and corruption, the roles of domestic civil society and the international community, the impact of democratization on the quality of governance, democracy’s prospects, and illustrative country case studies.

Prerequisites

None.

Please contact the faculty member : rsuberu@bennington.edu

Instructor

  • Rotimi Suberu

Day and Time

Academic Term

Spring 2017

Credits

4

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

20