When A Compatriot Becomes A Foe : Political Parties And Violent Elections In Kenya And South Africa
When A Compatriot Becomes A Foe : Political Parties And Violent Elections In Kenya And South Africa
This paper examines the operations of political parties in Kenya and South Africa and provides an analysis of how such operations have become drivers of election violence. The paper contends that as a result of the structure of political parties and how they operate, they have contributed to the violence that has become an endemic feature of the electoral processes in both countries. In Kenya, most election violence has been between supporters of different political parties who contest election outcomes. In South Africa, even though there were many incidents of inter-party violence in the 1990s, recent trends indicate reductions of the same but with an increase in intra-party violence, especially over disputed party lists.
CITATION: Ahere, John Rabuogi. When A Compatriot Becomes A Foe : Political Parties And Violent Elections In Kenya And South Africa . : Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA) , 2018. Journal of African Elections, Vol.17, No.1, 2018, pp. 25 - 48 - Available at: https://library.au.int/when-compatriot-becomes-foe-political-parties-and-violent-elections-kenya-and-south-africa