Norm Entrepreneurs or Norm Takers? African and Western Election Observer Missions’ Agency in Determining the Credibility of Zimbabwe’s Elections
Mziwandile Ndlovu ()
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Mziwandile Ndlovu: African Institute for Development Policy
Chapter Chapter 10 in Democracy and Africanness, 2022, pp 143-160 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Election observation is one practice that is now a common feature in the electoral democracy realm of Africa, and it commenced with Zimbabwe’s 1980 independence elections. Two decades later, Zimbabwe gained notoriety for contested election outcomes manifesting in negative verdicts by election observer missions of all classes. At the forefront of these verdicts were mostly western missions and a perception also formed that African missions were lenient towards Zimbabwe and self-censored themselves to issue positive verdicts. Western missions came to be viewed as norm entrepreneurs while African missions are viewed as norm takers. The negative verdicts were entwined with the dramatic collapse of diplomatic relations between Zimbabwe and western powers resulting in the later imposing sanctions on the former. Using Zimbabwe as a case study, this chapter examines the extent to which the practice of election observation can be regarded as an African practice. Drawing on the conventional constructivist logic contrasted against Acharya as well as Finnemore and Sikkink’s (2013, 1998) Norm Diffusion model logic, the chapter sets out to quantify the contribution that Africa has made to election observation while also determining the willingness of African governments to subject themselves to the practice. The chapter draws from registered voters, election observers, civil society, and legislators. The findings reveal that while it is relatively true that Africa makes little contribution to election observation and does it reluctantly to access aid and investment, it has also improved dramatically in its technical prowess.
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:aaechp:978-3-031-11248-5_10
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-11248-5_10
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