Multi-ethnic vision or ethnic nationalism? The contested legacies of Anderson Mazoka and Zambia’s 2006 election

Sishuwa Sishuwa
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT Studies on elections in Africa’s multiparty democracies stress the role of “incumbency advantages” in the re-election of presidents. While this blanket explanation holds true for the most part, it does not cover the successes of incumbents in polls conducted with minimal levels of clientelism and manipulation. Using the example of Zambia’s 2006 election, this paper shows how incumbents in multi-ethnic societies attempt to build a winning coalition through effective appeals to ethnic inclusion. After the main opposition leader Anderson Mazoka died four months before the election, President Levy Mwanawasa appropriated Mazoka’s legacy as a politician committed to ethnic inclusion. He successfully presented himself in non-ethnic terms, accused his rivals of being tribalists and urged voters to reject them. Mwanawasa won over key sections of the opposition’s base and an election he was widely expected to lose, demonstrating the value of studying the role of individual political leadership in incumbent-party hegemony.
多民族愿景还是民族主义?安德森·马佐卡(Anderson Mazoka)和赞比亚2006年大选的争议遗产
对非洲多党民主国家选举的研究强调了“在任优势”在总统连任中的作用。虽然这种笼统的解释在很大程度上是正确的,但它并没有涵盖在任者在民意调查中取得的成功,而民意调查的裙带关系和操纵程度最低。本文以赞比亚2006年大选为例,展示了多民族社会的现任者如何通过有效呼吁民族包容来建立一个获胜的联盟。在选举前4个月,主要反对党领袖安德森·马佐卡去世后,总统姆瓦纳瓦萨将马佐卡作为一名致力于种族包容的政治家的遗产挪用。他成功地以非种族的方式展示了自己,指责他的竞争对手是部落主义者,并敦促选民拒绝他们。姆瓦纳瓦萨赢得了反对派基础的关键部分,并赢得了人们普遍认为他会输掉的选举,这表明了研究个人政治领导在现任政党霸权中的作用的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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