从抗议到政党:非洲的政党建设与民主化

From Protest to Parties: Party-building and democratization in Africa

African Affairs · 2014
被引 69
ABS 3

中文导读

本书探讨为何一些民主化国家出现强大的跨族群反对党,而另一些则组织薄弱、分裂,基于津巴布韦、赞比亚和肯尼亚的案例研究,分析抗议与政治变革的关系。

Abstract

From Protest to Parties, now issued in paperback, poses the important but neglected question of why ‘we find strong, cross-ethnic opposition parties in some democratizing countries, while opposition parties tend toward organizational weakness and fragmentation in others?’ (p. 245). In answering this question, LeBas ‘engages with a larger debate about the relationship between protest and political change’ and, more specifically, of whether ‘sustained popular mobilization assist[s] or hinder[s] democratization’ (p. 13). By drawing on the case studies of Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Kenya, LeBas provides a clear and persuasive response, and the analysis is thought-provoking and controversial. In addition, the book provides an excellent overview of historical legacies, the organization of protest, and formation of parties in the three country case studies – although the level of detail may prove a distraction for some, while the methodology raises questions about whether the analysis is really applicable to ‘other late Third World democratizers’ as claimed (p. 5).

民主化政党建设非洲政治抗议与政治变革