Abstract
I ask where African opposition parties organize. Party-building is communicative; it involves persuading people to become activists. The literature suggests that opposition parties organize where people are receptive to their messages and build outwards from there. I study Chadema’s opposition party-building through site-intensive fieldwork. Chadema organized primarily in such receptive areas, but also in four unreceptive constituencies. I use these deviant constituencies to refine the literature. Prior theory neglects the heterogeneity of party-building. I decompose party-building into three modes as follows: by touring leaders, branches and concentrating leaders. Concentrating leaders dedicate their organizing to single places. They employ small rallies which afford interactive, individualized and iterative communication. This personalized communication enables them to overcome initial unreceptiveness to their messages. I conclude that opposition parties can organize in unreceptive areas, but only through the personalized methods of these ‘lone organizers’. Altogether, I show how and through whom opposition parties organize in hostile environments.
Highlights
I ask where African opposition parties organize
I distinguish between three modes of party-building by the actors involved and the practices or methods they employ: organizing by (1) touring leaders, (2) branches and (3) concentrating leaders or “lone organizers” who focus on one area or constituency
I find that it organized in receptive areas through touring leaders and branches, but that it organized in the Central Zone through the personalized party-building of a small group of lone organizers
Summary
Dr Dan Paget is a lecturer in politics at the University of Aberdeen. He has taught at University College London and the School of Oriental and African Studies. He read for a D.Phil in Politics at the University of Oxford. His research lies at the juncture of political communication, party politics and political ideologies His contemporary research is about African political thought, and spans elitist plebeianism, populism, restorationism, nationalism and republicanism. His publications chronicle Tanzania’s changing authoritarian context and the fortunes of Tanzanian opposition party Chadema. Dan’s current book project is about mass rallies and political communication in sub-Saharan Africa
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