非洲与轮值民主的前景

Diana-Abasi Ibanga
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摘要

共享社会、经济和政治机遇对于许多非洲国家的稳定至关重要。民主被认为是一种包容性框架,允许个人自由争夺这些机会。然而,与西方民主社会相比,非洲的民主似乎并不奏效。一些非洲政治哲学家将这一问题归咎于非洲大陆奉行的自由民主类型,即以欧洲和北美的霸权社会政治话语为蓝本。因此,有人认为,非洲可行的民主模式必须植根于非洲大陆的文化和历史细微差别之中。因此,加纳哲学家 Kwasi Wiredu 最初的努力诉诸于传统阿坎社会的无党派共识民主。但是,在单一民族的传统阿肯社会中取得成功的协商一致模式,能否在现代非洲国家这样的多民族社会中产生同样的效果,令人怀疑。目前,种族问题仍然是非洲大陆民主化的主要障碍。非洲需要一种考虑到其僵化的多民族特征的民主模式,而不是不加批判地将全球民主知识强加给非洲,或完全无视当地的民主知识。因此,我研究了如何在民主实践中兼顾种族等因素。文章以非洲传统的 "一杯 "社会实践为基础,介绍了一种名为 "轮流民主 "的实验模式,它体现了传统社会的权力轮流和配给现象。文章展示了本土知识如何成为非洲民主实践的起点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Africa and the prospects of rotational democracy
Sharing of social, economic, and political opportunities is crucial for the stability of many African states. Democracy has been identified as an inclusive framework that allows individuals to freely contest for these opportunities. However, in Africa, democracy appears not to work as compared to Western democratic societies. Some African political philosophers blame the problem on liberal democratic type practiced in the continent, which is modeled after the hegemonic socio‐political discourse in Europe and North America. Thus, it is argued that workable democratic model for Africa must be embedded in the continent's cultural and historical nuances. Consequently, initial effort by the Ghanaian philosopher Kwasi Wiredu appealed to the nonpartisan Consensus Democracy of traditional Akan society. But it is doubtful that the consensual model, which was successful in the mono‐ethnic traditional Akan society, will produce the same effect in a multi‐ethnic society as the modern African states. At present, ethnicity inter alia remains a major obstruction to democratization of the continent. Africa needs a democratic model that takes its rigid multi‐ethnic character into account instead of uncritically imposing global democratic knowledge to African situations or totally disregarding local knowledge of democracy. Therefore, I investigate how ethnicity inter alia can be accommodated in democratic practice. An experimental model called “Rotational Democracy” is introduced based on the traditional African social practice of One Cup, which embodies the phenomena of power rotation and rationing of the traditional society. The article demonstrates how indigenous knowledge can be the starting point for democratic practice in Africa.
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