- Title
- Donor conditionalities and democratisation in Kenya, 1991-1997
- Creator
- Muriuki, Irene
- Subject
- Economic assistance -- Political aspects -- Kenya
- Subject
- Democracy -- Kenya
- Subject
- Elections -- Kenya
- Subject
- Kenya -- Politics and government -- 1978-2002
- Date
- 2000
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MA
- Identifier
- vital:2812
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003022
- Identifier
- Economic assistance -- Political aspects -- Kenya
- Identifier
- Democracy -- Kenya
- Identifier
- Elections -- Kenya
- Identifier
- Kenya -- Politics and government -- 1978-2002
- Description
- The end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union has encouraged democratisation in most parts of Africa. At the same time, Western donors' attitudes towards r~cipients of foreign aid have changed. This has resulted in a new practice, which attempts to force Third World states to move toward liberal democracy by conditioning lending on the holding of mUlti-party elections. In Africa this has resulted to the holding of multi-party elections. This study attempts to examine donor conditionalities and democratisation in Kenya by examining the results of 1992 and 1997 multi-party elections. Kenya attained independence from the British and ushered in a multi-party democracy in 1963. Since then, the country has undergone a full circle of political development, starting with a multi-party democracy at independence, through a one party dictatorship between 1982 and 1992 and back to a multi-party democracy in 1993. The need to satisfy foreign donors forced the leadership to amend Section 2(A) of Kenya' s constitution that had legalised single-party rule in 1982 thus allowing plural politics. The externally pressured transition to multi-party democracy though has resulted in increased corruption, state-sponsored ethnic violence, continued political authoritarianism and disastrous economic mismanagement of what was once considered a model for the continent. This study urges that Western donors should focus less on elections and more on the fostering of democratic institutions through breaking patterns of neo-patrimonial rule that have inforn1ed and continue to inform politics in Kenya. Political reforms have been resisted by the incumbency in the fear tha! they may curtail the power of the political leadership whose main objective has been to cling to power.
- Format
- 115 pages, pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Political Studies
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Muriuki, Irene
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