Patronage, District Creation, and Reform in Uganda

The effects of economic and political reforms on patronage in Africa remains unclear. In particular, there is much disagreement about whether structural adjustment programs and democratization have helped to make patronage less pervasive in African politics. Here, I examine the case study of Uganda,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in comparative international development 2010-03, Vol.45 (1), p.83-103
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description The effects of economic and political reforms on patronage in Africa remains unclear. In particular, there is much disagreement about whether structural adjustment programs and democratization have helped to make patronage less pervasive in African politics. Here, I examine the case study of Uganda, which has received much praise for its large-scale economic and political reforms since the late 1980s. However, at the same time, Uganda has also experienced a near-explosion in the number of districts (the highest level of local government), going from 39 to 80 in less than a decade. I examine a variety of potential reasons why these districts might have been created and argue, through the use of both qualitative and quantitative analysis, that district creation has functioned as a source of patronage. Specifically, I show that President Museveni’s government has created new districts as a means to compensate for other patronage resources lost through reforms and that new districts have helped him to continue to win elections. This paper thus constitutes the first rigorous demonstration that the creation of new sub-national political units can constitute a form of patronage and suggests that similar processes may be currently taking place across Africa.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Political Science Complete; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Africa
Analysis
Case studies
Decentralization
Democracy
Democratization
Districts
Elections
Governmental reform
Local government
Minority & ethnic violence
Patronage
Political aspects
Political Change
Political reform
Political systems
Politics
Presidents
Quantitative Methods
Reform
Reforms
Social Sciences
Structural Adjustment
Uganda
Voters
title Patronage, District Creation, and Reform in Uganda
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