Urbanization and political change in Africa
Urbanization and political change in Africa
Urbanization is transforming the human and political geography of Africa. While a growing body of research explores the urban dimensions of clientelism, contentious action, and social mobilization, there has been less attention given to the ways in which this demographic megatrend is influencing political change more broadly. We argue that the political implications of African urbanization are contingent on local conditions and experiences; there are no deterministic associations between urbanization and political change. To better understand the mechanisms linking urbanization to politics, we argue that a place-based approach is needed. We illustrate this by reviewing and highlighting how urbanization may affect (i) the nature and balance of citizen preferences; (ii) the composition, interests, and influence of elite actors; (iii) forms of political mobilization; (iv) shifting gender roles; (v) the role of civil society in political processes; and (vi) the likelihood and manifestations of contentious collective action. We conclude with a discussion of directions for further research.
353–376
Hoelscher, Kristian
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Dorward, Nick
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Fox, Sean
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Lawanson, Taibat
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Paller, Jeffrey W.
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Phillips, Melanie L.
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27 July 2023
Hoelscher, Kristian
cd3658d5-b50c-4fd0-a832-cfa68c56f26e
Dorward, Nick
a6c40613-4337-44f8-83e8-eb3730a7094d
Fox, Sean
483c00a1-ded9-4a5f-8d8a-eeb4fb25fc01
Lawanson, Taibat
3336f346-94b4-4733-9cfc-fe7dd5a01e5a
Paller, Jeffrey W.
a6099ed1-fd08-442f-9f7a-b2a77b3a5ae0
Phillips, Melanie L.
901770ba-b856-4e0e-9b78-c4478e389edf
Hoelscher, Kristian, Dorward, Nick, Fox, Sean, Lawanson, Taibat, Paller, Jeffrey W. and Phillips, Melanie L.
(2023)
Urbanization and political change in Africa.
African Affairs, 122 (488), .
(doi:10.1093/afraf/adad021).
Abstract
Urbanization is transforming the human and political geography of Africa. While a growing body of research explores the urban dimensions of clientelism, contentious action, and social mobilization, there has been less attention given to the ways in which this demographic megatrend is influencing political change more broadly. We argue that the political implications of African urbanization are contingent on local conditions and experiences; there are no deterministic associations between urbanization and political change. To better understand the mechanisms linking urbanization to politics, we argue that a place-based approach is needed. We illustrate this by reviewing and highlighting how urbanization may affect (i) the nature and balance of citizen preferences; (ii) the composition, interests, and influence of elite actors; (iii) forms of political mobilization; (iv) shifting gender roles; (v) the role of civil society in political processes; and (vi) the likelihood and manifestations of contentious collective action. We conclude with a discussion of directions for further research.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 July 2023
Published date: 27 July 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 494996
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494996
ISSN: 0001-9909
PURE UUID: f37613de-e650-4919-ab4f-ce6ea6c7faa9
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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2024 16:34
Last modified: 26 Oct 2024 02:11
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Contributors
Author:
Kristian Hoelscher
Author:
Nick Dorward
Author:
Sean Fox
Author:
Taibat Lawanson
Author:
Jeffrey W. Paller
Author:
Melanie L. Phillips
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