Understanding the Differential Nature of Protest Movements in Africa Through Political Settlements Analysis: the Case of the ‘Fixthecountry’ Movement in Ghana
What explains why protest movements refuse the support of opposition parties despite the correlation in their demands? Answers to this question make up the content of this paper. In recent years, protest movements have dominated the political space of several sub-Saharan African countries, many o...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute for African Studies
2023-06-01
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| Series: | Ученые записки Института Африки Российской академии наук |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://africajournal.ru/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Zapiski-2-2023-8-101-116-Gerald-Emmanuel-Arhin.pdf |
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| Summary: | What explains why protest movements refuse the support of opposition parties despite
the correlation in their demands? Answers to this question make up the content of this paper. In
recent years, protest movements have dominated the political space of several sub-Saharan African
countries, many of which have claimed to have no partisan ties. Relying on insights from the
detachment thesis, this paper argues that the nature of the strategies adopted by protest movements
in relation to political parties depends on the nature of the country’s political settlements. The study
uses the FixTheCountry protest movement in Ghana as a case study. After a discourse analysis into
speeches and press statements, an analysis of 15 qualitative interviews conducted in Ghana, as well
as a review of various secondary literature ranging from journal articles to books, this paper
concludes that protest movements instrumentalise the competitive nature of a country’s political
settlements to gain popular support from the citizenry. Given that only two political parties
dominate Ghana’s political arena, the protest movement presents itself as non-partisan, a strategy
intended to first, express distrust in both parties; and second, attract the attention of non-partisan
citizens and disaffected supporters of both parties. The paper demonstrates that the nature of a
country’s political settlements is a key determinant of the nature of the relationship between protest
movements and political parties, both ruling and opposition ones. This paper’s findings contribute
to our understanding of how contemporary African protest movements continue to shape and
reshape their relationship with political parties and the relevance of a country’s political structure
in the process. |
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| ISSN: | 2412-5717 3034-3496 |