Traditional Leaders In Modern Africa: Can Democracy And The Chief Co-Exist?
Author: Carolyn Logan
Date: 2008
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35 pages
(320KB)
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Can democracy and the African chief co-exist? This study from Michigan State University analyses Afrobarometer survey data to explore popular perceptions of elected and traditional leaders. It finds that positive attitudes toward chiefs are not incompatible with democracy – and vice versa. Furthermore, positive perceptions of chiefs and of elected leaders are strongly linked. African societies are adept at integrating seemingly incompatible institutional structures, such as traditional institutions.
Traditionalists regard Africa’s traditional chiefs as the true representatives of their people, accessible, respected and legitimate and therefore still essential to politics on the continent. Modernists view traditional authority as a gerontocratic, chauvinistic, authoritarian and increasingly irrelevant form of rule that is antithetical to democracy. This debate has intensified in the last two decades as efforts at democratisation and decentralisation have increased competing claims to power and legitimacy, especially at the local level.
Both traditionalists and modernists, however, often see traditional authority and elected political leaders as competitors. The struggle between the two for political power and legitimacy is seen as a zero-sum game. Whatever authority a traditional leader wrenches from the state is treated as a loss for state leadership and vice versa.
However, there has been the lack of empirical evidence concerning popular perceptions of traditional leaders, how they are formed and how they relate both to perceptions of elected leaders and to support for a democratic system of government. It is now clear that:
There are no simple solutions to the question of how to define the role of chiefs and elders in African political systems. Individual local context is important. Some of the study's implications are that:
An updated version of this article will appear in the Journal of Modern African Studies, vol. 47, no. 1 in March 2009.
Access full text: available online
Source:
Logan, C., 2008, 'Traditional Leaders In Modern Africa: Can Democracy And The Chief Co-Exist?', Afrobarometer Working Paper No. 93, Cape Town
Author:
Carolyn Logan
, clogan@msu.edu