Gadaa System: Republican and Federal System
Deribie Demmeksa
No zcr4d_v1, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
This chapter advances the argument that the Gadaa System constitutes an indigenous African model of republican and federal governance that long predates the rise of modern Western republicanism. It grounds the legitimacy of the Gadaa System in popular sovereignty, the rule of law, and periodic democratic elections. The chapter demonstrates that the Oromo polity institutionalised universal male suffrage, regular eight-year electoral cycles, limited terms of office, accountability, recall mechanisms, balanced opposition through a five-party structure, and separation of powers among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, all embedded within an orally codified constitutional order. Structurally, the system operates through a highly decentralised federation composed of local, regional, confederate (Booranaa and Baarentuu), and pan-Oromo assemblies (Caffee), with authority flowing upward through representation while ultimate sovereignty remains vested in the people. The Caffee functions as the supreme legislative authority, complemented by the Luba Council, Hiriyaa institutions, and the tripartite Gadaa Council, thereby creating both vertical and horizontal distributions of power. The chapter further clarifies the complex semantic range of the term “Gadaa,” which encompasses grade, generation, party, public office, legitimate state power, law, institution, democracy, philosophy, civilisation, and statehood. This underscores Gadaa System´s civilizational depth and ideological coherence. While acknowledging historical decentralisation and minor structural limitations, the chapter concludes that the Gadaa System represents a sophisticated, participatory, and constitutionally grounded republican-federal order rooted in Oromo concepts of liberty (walabummaa), sovereignty (birmadummaa), equality (qixxummaa), harmony (safuu), and holistic peace (nagaa). The chapter positions the Gadaa System as both a distinctive indigenous governance model and a significant contribution to comparative democratic theory.
Date: 2020-01-12
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:zcr4d_v1
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/zcr4d_v1
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