Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T21:06:01.075Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Elections and political legitimacy in Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2011

Résumé

Bien qu'il ait commencé l'indépendence en tant que société profondément divisée après le trauma de Mau Mau, le Kenya a maintenu un des systèmes politiques ouverts en Afrique en dépit d'avoir officiellement un seul parti. Les élections nationales ont procuré un mécanisme par lequel du sang nouveau pourrait être incorporé au régime. Plus récemment des difficultés économiques grandissantes et l'insécurité du Président Moi ont fortement intensifié les tendances autoritaires. Les élections ont été de plus en plus truquées afin de supporter le groupe minoritaire d'où Moi tire son pouvoir. Comme partout ailleurs en Afrique le régime a cédé aux demandes en faveur d'une politique à partis multiples mais les premieres élections de ce genre ont produit une scène politique extrêmement fragmentée.

Type
‘One man, many votes’
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alot, M., and Nube, A. 1974a. ‘Kenya proves one-party democracy’, Africa 39, 2834.Google Scholar
Alot, M. 1974b. ‘Kenya elections: the fall of tin gods’, Afriscope 4, 79.Google Scholar
Barkan, J. D. 1975. ‘Bringing home the pork: legislator behaviour, rural development and political change in east Africa’, in Smith, J. and Musolf, L. (eds.), Legislatures in Development. Durham N. C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Bennett, G. and Rosberg, C. G. 1961. The Kenyatta Election 1960-61. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Berman, B. J., and Lonsdale, J. M. 1992. Unhappy Valley: conflict in Kenya and Africa. London: James Currey.Google Scholar
Carey Jones, N. S. 1966. The Anatomy of Uhuru: an essay on Kenya's independence. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Cross, J. S. 1983. ‘L'etat, c'est Moi: political transition and the Kenya general election of 1979’. Discussion paper 66, Norwich: School of Development Studies, University of East Anglia.Google Scholar
Diamond, L. 1988. Class, Ethnicity and Democracy in Nigeria. Syracuse N. Y.: Syracuse University Press.Google Scholar
Furedi, F. 1989. The Mau Mau War in perspective. London: James Currey.Google Scholar
Gertzel, C. J. 1970. The Politics of Independent Kenya. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.Google Scholar
Hornsby, C. P. W. 1986. ‘The Member of Parliament in Kenya, 1969-83’. Unpublished D.Phil, dissertation, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Hornsby, C. P. W. 1989. ‘The social structure of the National Assembly in Kenya, 1969-83’, Journal of Modern African Studies 27 (2), 275296.Google Scholar
Hornsby, C. and Throup, D. 1992. ‘Elections and political change in Kenya’, Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics 30 (2), 179–99.Google Scholar
Hyden, G., and Leys, C. 1972. ‘Elections and politics in single-party systems: the case of Kenya and Tanzania’, British Journal of Political Science 2.Google Scholar
Karimi, J., and Ochieng, P. 1980. The Kenyatta Succession. Nairobi: Transafrica.Google Scholar
Kasfir, N. 1976. The Shrinking Political Arena: participation and ethnicity in African politics, with a case study of Uganda. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mueller, S. D. 1984. ‘Government and opposition in Kenya, 1966-69’, Journal of Modem African Studies 22 (3), 399427.Google Scholar
Murray-Brown, J. 1972. Kenyatta. London: Dutton.Google Scholar
Presidential Ministerial Committee on Trade Unionism in Kenya. 1965. The Policy on Trade Union Organization in Kenya. Nairobi: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1975. Proletarians and African Capitalism: the Kenyan case, 1960-72. London: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sanger, C., and Nottingham, J. 1964. ‘The Kenya general election of 1963’, Journal of Modem African Studies 2 (1), 140.Google Scholar
Throup, D. W. 1987. ‘The construction and destruction of the Kenyatta state’, in Schatzberg, M. G. (ed.), The Political Economy of Kenya, pp. 4374. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Throup, D. W. 1992. ‘Daniel arap Moi’, in Glickman, Harvey (ed.), Political Leaders of Contemporary Africa South of the Sahara. New York: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar
Throup, D. W. Forthcoming. ‘“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's”: the politics of Church-State conflict in Kenya’, in Twaddle, M. and Hansen, H. B. (eds.), Politics and Religion in East Africa. London: James Currey.Google Scholar
Throup, D., and Hornsby, C. 1992. ‘Kenya, 1963, 1992 and All That: some psephological predictions of multi-part elections in Kenya’. Unpublished paper presented to the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom conference, Stirling, 810 September, and to the South Eastern Regional Seminar on African Studies, Charlottesville, Va., 3 October.Google Scholar
Widner, J. A. 1992. The Rise of a Party-state in Kenya: from Harambee to Nyayo. Berkeley, Cal.: University of California Press.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1980. Kenya: population and development, Country Study series. Washington D. C.: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.Google Scholar