
Constitutionalisation of Political Parties and the State of Democracy in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Herausgeber:innen:
- |
- Reihe:
- Recht und Verfassung in Afrika - Law and Constitution in Africa, Band 48
- Verlag:
- 2025
Zusammenfassung
Dieser von Charles Fombad und Johannes Socher herausgegebene Band analysiert die Regulierung von politischen Parteien und deren Auswirkungen auf Konstitutionalismus und Mehrparteiendemokratie in Subsahara-Afrika. Aufbauend auf einer Untersuchung der einschlägigen internationalen und regionalen völkerrechtlichen Standards sowie den Erfahrungen Kontinentaleuropas wird in einem ersten Teil ein methodischer Rahmen entwickelt. Anhand von 12 Länderstudien – Äthiopien, Kamerun, Kenia, Liberia, Mauritius, Mosambik, Nigeria, Ruanda, Senegal, Simbabwe, Südafrika und Uganda – werden sodann unterschiedliche nationale Erfahrungen untersucht. Ein abschließendes Kapitel fasst zentrale Ergebnisse des Bands zusammen und skizziert einige Reformvorschläge.Mit Beiträgen vonLukman Abdulrauf | José Adalima | Buluma Bwire | Mai Cheng | Zelalem Degifie | Abdou Khadre Diop | Charles M. Fombad | Bekezela Gumbo | James Nkuubi | Adriano Nuvunga | Neel R. Purmah | Johannes Socher | Heather A. Thuynsma | Ajereboh J. Tichock | Gerald Dan Yeakula | Edson Ziso
Schlagworte
Publikation durchsuchen
Bibliographische Angaben
- Copyrightjahr
- 2025
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-7560-3353-9
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7489-6316-5
- Verlag
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Reihe
- Recht und Verfassung in Afrika - Law and Constitution in Africa
- Band
- 48
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Seiten
- 574
- Produkttyp
- Sammelband
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Foreword
- Preface
- Charles M Fombad Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Conceptualisation of political parties
- 2.2 The pre-1990 evolution of African political parties
- 3. Rationalising political-party constitutionalisation
- 4.1 General regulatory framework
- 4.2 Formal recognition of multipartyism
- 4.3 Framework for defining the scope of parties’ rights and duties
- 4.4 The framework for free and fair political participation
- 4.5 The principle of internal democracy
- 4.6 Framework for bans and regulatory restrictions
- 4.7 Mechanisms for political-party funding
- 4.8 The principle of separating state and party
- 4.9 Ensuring compliance with democratic values and principles
- 5. Post-1990 trends and tendencies in the evolution of political parties
- 6. Conclusion
- Mai Cheng Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Lack of an enabling environment on the African continent
- 2.2 Externally driven institutional development can bring only formal changes
- 2.3 Why politicians and governments can make systems dysfunctional
- 3.1 Starting again from scratch is not a viable option
- 3.2 Possible directions for future development
- Charles M Fombad, Johannes Socher Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1.1 The African Charter and other human rights instruments
- 2.1.2 The AU’s democracy and good governance agenda
- 2.2.1. ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance
- 2.2.2 Other REC instruments on democracy and good governance
- 2.2.3 SADC Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections
- 3.1 The implications of uneven ratification and domestication
- 3.2.1 Freedom not to belong to a party and the right to political participation
- 3.2.2 Limitations on and dissolution of political parties
- 3.2.3 Related rights and obligations
- 3.3.1 Reporting mechanisms and synthesis reports
- 3.3.2 AU and REC election observation missions
- 4. Conclusion
- Johannes Socher Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1. Right to political participation
- 2.2 Freedom of association
- 2.3 Equal treatment of and non-discrimination against specific groups
- 2.4 Financing and transparency
- 3.1 Five waves of party constitutionalisation
- 3.2 Three models of constitutionalisation
- 3.3 Harmonisation at the European level
- 4.1 The prohibition of anti-democratic parties
- 4.2 The requirement of intra-party democracy
- 5. Conclusion
- Abdou Khadre Diop Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 The rights of political parties
- 2.2 The duties of political parties
- 3.1 Political-party financing
- 3.2 The Leader of the Opposition
- 4.1 The dissolution of PASTEF
- 4.2.1 The electoral exclusion of PDS and Takhawu Senegal leaders (2019)
- 4.2.2 The electoral exclusion of PDS and PASTEF leaders (2024)
- 5. Conclusion
- Buluma Bwire Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 The rise and fall of KANU’s strongest opponent
- 2.2 The fall of KANU and the rise of coalition parties in 2002
- 2.3 Political parties in the era of the 2010 Constitution
- 2.4 A return to single-party dominance cloaked as multipartyism
- 2.5 The role of the Office of the Registrar of Political Parties
- 3. The impact of ethnicity on Kenya’s democracy
- 4. Conclusion
- Lukman Abdulrauf, Johannes Socher Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 From the colonial period to independence
- 2.2 Military rule
- 2.3 Democratisation and multipartyism
- 3.1 Scope and limitations of political party regulation
- 3.2 Intra-Party democracy and promotion of democratic values
- 3.3 Party financing
- 3.4 INEC registration and oversight
- 4.1 Undemocratic selection of party candidates
- 4.2 Political nomadism
- 4.3 Monetisation of party politics
- 4.4 Judicialisation of party conflicts
- 4.5 Blurring the line between the state and ruling parties
- 5. Conclusion
- Gerald Dan Yeakula Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Political foundations
- 2.2 Century-long rule by a single party
- 2.3 Multipartyism on the horizon
- 3.1 The 1847 Constitution and later developments
- 3.2 The 1986 Constitution and later developments
- 3.3.1 Status provisions
- 3.3.2 Ancillary-rights provisions
- 3.3.3 Political-process provisions
- 4.1 Overview
- 4.2 Political parties in perspective
- 4.3 Elections in practice
- 4.4 The political environment
- 4.5 The military factor
- 5. Conclusion
- Neel R Purmah Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Ethnic-based political representation
- 2.2 Origins and characteristics of the best-loser system
- 2.3 Mauritius’s main political parties
- 3.1 Registration and the status of political parties
- 3.2 Intra-party democracy
- 3.3 Oversight of political parties
- 4.1 Personalised party factions and temporary alliances
- 4.2 Consociationalism and its effect on multiparty democracy
- 4.3 Ethnic representation in political parties
- 5.1 Constitutionalisation of political parties
- 5.2 Enactment of an electoral law
- 5.3 Financing political parties
- 6 Conclusion
- Adriano Nuvunga, José Adalima Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 1994–2004: Two-party domination by Frelimo and Renamo
- 2.2 Since 2004: Growing dominance of Frelimo and decline of Renamo
- 2.3. Since 2018: The consolidation of Frelimo’s dominance
- 3.1 Parliamentary thresholds for political parties
- 3.2 The status of political parties in the electoral system
- 3.3.1 Frelimo
- 3.3.2 Renamo
- 3.3.3 The MDM, other parties, and extra-parliamentary groups
- 3.3.4 Conclusions on intra-party democracy
- 3.4 Financing of political parties
- 4. Political parties, organised crime, and the state of democracy
- 5. Conclusion
- Bekezela Gumbo Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Historical and political context
- 3.1 The right to existence: limited multipartyism?
- 3.2.1 Founded by statute in accordance with the law
- 3.2.2 Nationwide mobilisation and presence in the capital
- 3.2.3 Commitment to the nation-building agenda
- 3.3.1 Detailed design of founding statutes
- 3.3.2 Documentation accompanying registration applications
- 3.4.1 Fundraising and financial transparency
- 3.4.2 Government financial support to political parties
- 3.5 Dialogue and consensus-building provisions
- 3.6 Punitive measures on politicians
- 4. Conclusion
- Charles M Fombad, Ajereboh J Tichock Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 The bloody path to the reintroduction of multipartyism in 1990
- 2.2 The twin elections of 1992 and the trajectory of multipartyism
- 3.1 Key aspects of the regulatory framework
- 4 The multiparty farce and descent into multiparty autocracy
- 5.1 Manipulation of electoral laws and electoral districts
- 5.2 Restrictions on voting access in opposition strongholds
- 5.3 Intimidation and violence against opposition leaders and supporters
- 5.4 Co-option and the neutralisation of opposition leaders
- 5.5 Divisions within opposition ranks
- 5.6 Political-party funding and abuse of incumbency
- 5.7 The absence of the fundamentals of constitutionalism and the rule of law
- 5.8 Continued international support for the Biya government
- 6. Conclusion
- Edson Ziso Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. ZANU-PF and the desire for a one-party state
- 3. The constitutional and legal framework for political parties
- 4.1 Formation and registration of political parties
- 4.2 Use and abuse of the power to recall MPs
- 4.3 Regulating political parties in the electoral space
- 5.1 Strategic ambiguity: the CCC goes “structureless”
- 5.2 Abandonment of the party constitution
- 6. Conclusion
- James Nkuubi Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 The evolution of multipartyism in post-independence Uganda (1962–1995)
- 2.2 Elusive multipartyism in the post-1995 dispensation
- 2.3 Claw-back clauses in the Constitution
- 2.4 Enabling unfettered multipartyism: The 2000 and 2005 referendums
- 2.5 Uganda at 62: Between militarisation and democratisation
- 3.1 “Sell-out diplomacy”: The case of the Democratic Party
- 3.2 The impact of “sell-out diplomacy” on multiparty politics
- 3.3 The rise of militancy in Uganda’s opposition politics
- 3.4 NUP Militancy and Multiparty politics
- 4. Conclusion
- Heather A Thuynsma Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Building transparency by disclosing donations
- 2.2 The operation of the PPFA
- 3. Conceptual framework: The moneyball approach
- 4.1 Data-driven donor targeting
- 4.2 Measuring the impact of courting private donors
- 4.3 Engaging small donors
- 4.4 Using key challenges to political-party advantage
- 5. Conclusion
- Zelalem Degifie Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Party-financing regulation in constitutional democracies
- 3.1 Background and context
- 3.2.1 Rules regulating private funding
- 3.2.2 Public funding for political parties
- 3.2.3 Spending limits
- 3.2.4 Oversight, monitoring, and enforcement
- 4.1 Opposition parties’ dependency syndrome
- 4.2 Electoral market bias and hyper-incumbency advantages
- 4.3 Inequitable public funding: Reinforcing dominance
- 4.4 Culture of non-compliance
- 5.1 The uneven political playing field
- 5.2 Weak and frivolous political parties
- 5.3 Dominant party with unchecked powers
- 6. Conclusion
- Johannes Socher, Charles M Fombad Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2.1 Insufficient or inadequate constitutional power-sharing arrangements
- 2.2 Absence of, or unclear and ineffective, requirements for intra-party democracy
- 2.3 Ineffective regulations for holding ruling parties accountable
- 2.4 The increasing importance of regulating party agreements
- 2.5 Limited recognition and weak protection of opposition parties
- 2.6 Gaps in party-financing regulation and weak enforcement mechanisms
- 2.7 Lack of independent oversight
- 2.8 Limited impact of international and regional standards and bodies
- 3. Possible ways forward
- Information on ContributorsSeiten 567 - 568 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- IndexSeiten 569 - 574 Download Kapitel (PDF)




