Elections in Museveni's Uganda

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African Democracy
African political systems
Amuru Districts
Anne Mette Kjaer *
Authoritarianism
Bundibugyo District
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Corruption
Crime Preventer Program
Crime Preventers
Derek R. Peterson
Elections
electoral authoritarianism
elite bargaining Uganda
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Executive Legislative Tensions
Frederick Golooba-Mutebi
Henni Alava
IMF Official
Incumbent MP
Institutional Multiplicity
Jimmy Spire Ssentongo
Journal of Eastern African Studies
Kasese District
Kizza Besigye
LC1 Chairmen
Lotte Meinert *
LRA Conflict
Michaela Collord
Moses Khisa
MP Candidate
Narc Coalition
Nelson Kasfir
Nicole Beardsworth
non-democratic electoral processes
NRM Candidate
NRM Party
NRM Regime
Patronage
patronage networks
political ethnography
Political Finance
President Museveni
Rebecca Tapscott
regime consolidation
Richard Vokes
Sam Hickey
Sandrine Perrot
South Western Uganda
Uganda
Ugandan Elections
Ugandan Shillings
West Nile Bank Front
Wider Great Lakes Region
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138300125
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Uganda’s 2016 elections, which returned thirty-year incumbent President Yoweri Museveni and his National Resistance Movement (NRM) in yet another landslide, took place in an atmosphere of patronage, coercion and fraud. But is this diagnosis sufficient to understand the processes of voting and regime maintenance in Uganda today? Based on a series of detailed case studies from across Uganda, this book provides a more nuanced and complex picture of what the Museveni regime is, and how it keeps winning elections. Whilst not denying that various electoral malpractices are systemic to the regime’s survival, the authors find that these cannot be extricated from Uganda’s history, its wider social realities, and its local political cultures in which the NRM has become so embedded. In so doing, the authors – who include anthropologists, development specialists, historians, geographers, and political-scientists – develop new ways of thinking about the meaning of voting and elections in non-democratic Uganda, and elsewhere. This edition was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Eastern African Studies.

Sam Wilkins is a DPhil candidate at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford, UK. Richard Vokes is a senior lecturer in Anthropology and Development Studies at the University of Adelaide, Australia.