Governance and Democratization in West Africa
Governance and Democratization in West Africa
Democracy is said to have failed in Africa, four decades into independence few of the nations on the continent can boast a credible democratic government. But the writers in this book put the question differently: What is democracy in Africa? What happens to political ideas when they emigrate to other continents? Is the current crisis on the continent a failing of democracy or of the nation-state itself? Yet the picture is more complex than the broad political canvas and the turbulent history of the region suggest. As military and civil governments replace and usurp one another relentlessly, there are deeper shifts taking place throughout the region. The vast network of inter-linking social processes-civil society, the media, and academic, public concern with accountability and transparency, which form the bedrock of true democracy- are strengthening. Meanwhile, the region's international representatives, as Adebayo Williams makes clear, are now the writers and artists living in exile and calling for informed international intervention. There is a process underway, and the authors of this book have a word for it: "democracy". This book does not aim to signal to the world that everything's fine in West Africa, but rather to interrogate the adaptability of the concept of democracy, and to examine coldly the legitimacy of the modern nation.
CITATION: Olowu, Dede, ed. Governance and Democratization in West Africa edited by William, Adebayo|Soremekun, Kayode . Dakar : CODESRIA , 1999. - Available at: https://library.au.int/frgovernance-and-democratization-west-africa-5