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Rethinking Africa's Political Economy: An institutionalist perspective on South Africa

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Abstract

Xolela Mangcu argues that what distinguishes South Africa from many other African countries is the strength of its institutions. Over the past 18 years South Africa has been able to make peaceful and stable transitions between four presidents: from Nelson Mandela's charismatic authority, to Thabo Mbeki's rational-legal authority and Jacob Zuma's traditional/prebendal authority. Kgalema Motlanthe's presidency was too short to exhibit one type of authority or the other. Despite efforts by ruling party politicians to curtail the judiciary, the media and civil society, South Africa boasts strong institutions of the bourgeois public sphere. The Achilles heel for South Africa's democracy is the lack of strong micro-level institutions, particularly in local government, leading to regular eruptions of violent protests.

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Notes

  1. US President Barack Obama's speech delivered on the occasion of his state visit to Ghana in 2009.

  2. Frank Chikane (2012), a former Mbeki aide, holds a completely different view – that Mbeki's removal was unconstitutional as it was not done in parliament but in a meeting of the party's national executive committee.

  3. From the 2010 Annual Report of the IEC, Pretoria.

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Describes the state of South Africa's institutions and their weaknesses since 1994

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Mangcu, X. Rethinking Africa's Political Economy: An institutionalist perspective on South Africa. Development 55, 477–483 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1057/dev.2012.70

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/dev.2012.70

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