‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011

<p>This thesis explores the broad continuities in the strategies that individual leaders in Africa have employed to mobilise political support across different historical periods and party systems, from the late colonial to the post-colonial era, and from single-party to multiparty systems. It...

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Main Author: Sishuwa, S
Other Authors: Cheeseman, N
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
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author Sishuwa, S
author2 Cheeseman, N
author_facet Cheeseman, N
Sishuwa, S
author_sort Sishuwa, S
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis explores the broad continuities in the strategies that individual leaders in Africa have employed to mobilise political support across different historical periods and party systems, from the late colonial to the post-colonial era, and from single-party to multiparty systems. It examines this question through a historical biography of Michael Sata, a political leader in Zambia whose life and career, like those of several other Zambian individual politicians, cut across the main divides in the country’s political history: the late-colonial period (1953-1964), the one-party state (1973-1991) and the era of multiparty democracy (since 1991). Sata's experiences also span a number of political organisations such as the United National Independence Party (from the early 1960s to 1991), the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (1991-2001) and the Patriotic Front (2001-2011).</p> <p>I argue that Sata employed several political strategies such as populism, clientelism, ethnic appeals and coalition building to mobilise support across these historical epochs and party institutions. The existing literature on Zambian political change has largely focused on ethnicity, which has taken attention away from the fact that most ethnic politics has had, as this thesis demonstrates, a populist component. More broadly, what this study demonstrates is the utility of historical biography in understanding political change. Examining the life of an individual whose experiences cut across supposed turning points and disruptions, or the institutions that have come and gone with them, captures not only change but continuities too, which are generally missing in many accounts of political life in Africa, and consequently allows us to gain new and unique insights.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:cef15416-fb27-4c5c-b13b-bdf5310c9bcb2022-03-27T07:39:06Z‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:cef15416-fb27-4c5c-b13b-bdf5310c9bcbBiographyAfrican HistoryPoliticsZambiaMichael SataPopulismEnglishORA Deposit2017Sishuwa, SCheeseman, NDeutsch, J<p>This thesis explores the broad continuities in the strategies that individual leaders in Africa have employed to mobilise political support across different historical periods and party systems, from the late colonial to the post-colonial era, and from single-party to multiparty systems. It examines this question through a historical biography of Michael Sata, a political leader in Zambia whose life and career, like those of several other Zambian individual politicians, cut across the main divides in the country’s political history: the late-colonial period (1953-1964), the one-party state (1973-1991) and the era of multiparty democracy (since 1991). Sata's experiences also span a number of political organisations such as the United National Independence Party (from the early 1960s to 1991), the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (1991-2001) and the Patriotic Front (2001-2011).</p> <p>I argue that Sata employed several political strategies such as populism, clientelism, ethnic appeals and coalition building to mobilise support across these historical epochs and party institutions. The existing literature on Zambian political change has largely focused on ethnicity, which has taken attention away from the fact that most ethnic politics has had, as this thesis demonstrates, a populist component. More broadly, what this study demonstrates is the utility of historical biography in understanding political change. Examining the life of an individual whose experiences cut across supposed turning points and disruptions, or the institutions that have come and gone with them, captures not only change but continuities too, which are generally missing in many accounts of political life in Africa, and consequently allows us to gain new and unique insights.</p>
spellingShingle Biography
African History
Politics
Zambia
Michael Sata
Populism
Sishuwa, S
‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title ‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title_full ‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title_fullStr ‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title_full_unstemmed ‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title_short ‘I am Zambia’s redeemer’: populism and the rise of Michael Sata, 1955-2011
title_sort i am zambia s redeemer populism and the rise of michael sata 1955 2011
topic Biography
African History
Politics
Zambia
Michael Sata
Populism
work_keys_str_mv AT sishuwas iamzambiasredeemerpopulismandtheriseofmichaelsata19552011