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Missed Opportunities for Adopting Gadaa Democracy in the 17th Century

Deribie Demmeksa

No a3n7y_v1, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science

Abstract: This chapter offers a counterfactual political-historical analysis of a pivotal moment in East African history: the 17th-century encounter among the Abyssinian monarchy, European missionaries, and the indigenous Oromo Gadaa system. Demmeksa contends that both Abyssinian elites (Mekuwanent) and Western emissaries failed to seize an unprecedented opportunity to adopt or integrate the Gadaa system—a non-hierarchical, participatory republican model of governance marked by codified separation of powers, democratic deliberation, and jurisprudential sophistication. Drawing on oral traditions, archival sources, and ecclesiastical chronicles, the chapter reconstructs two distinct episodes in which Abyssinian nobility attempted to overthrow the monarchy and establish a republican order grounded in Oromo political philosophy. Simultaneously, it traces the Jesuit missionaries’ dismissal of the Gadaa system and Waaqeffannaa religion as “pagan,” revealing how epistemic and ethno-religious arrogance foreclosed the transference of indigenous democratic ideas to Europe. Demmeksa reframes Gadaa not as a relic but as a philosophically grounded constitutional order that preceded Enlightenment republicanism by centuries. He concludes that the dual failure—by Abyssinia to transform internally and by Europe to learn externally—represents a profound historical loss for the global democratic evolution. The chapter contributes to African political theory, subaltern historiography, and comparative political systems by positioning Gadaa as a viable indigenous alternative to Western models of governance.

Date: 2018-08-26
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:a3n7y_v1

DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/a3n7y_v1

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