A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election

Two of the post apartheid elections held in South Africa (1994, 1999) have been used as mechanisms to analyse and assess the extent to which the country’s transition from apartheid to a democratic dispensation is succeeding or not. The primary analytical focus of the 1994 and 1999 elections has revo...

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Main Author: Prudhomme, Leah Shianne
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003033
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-28232018-09-05T05:02:36ZA democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national electionPrudhomme, Leah ShianneAfrican National CongressElections -- South AfricaVoting -- South AfricaDemocracy -- South AfricaPolitical parties -- South AfricaSouth Africa -- Politics and government -- 1994-Two of the post apartheid elections held in South Africa (1994, 1999) have been used as mechanisms to analyse and assess the extent to which the country’s transition from apartheid to a democratic dispensation is succeeding or not. The primary analytical focus of the 1994 and 1999 elections has revolved around the nature of the party system and voting behaviour. Basically, contestation has arisen over two primary and related issues: the dominance of the African National Congress (ANC) weighed against the weakness of opposition parties and the implications that this development has for effective democratic consolidation. Also, whether voting decisions based on divisive racial and ethnic identities that underlie electoral contests are pervasive enough to derail the process of democratisation. Generally, the primary conclusion has been that the unfolding pattern of South African electoral politics indicates sufficient grounds on which to doubt the prospects for effective democratic consolidation. This dissertation engages these debates with particular reference to the 2004 elections. In contrast to this pessimistic view of the prospects of successful democratisation in South Africa it upholds through an analysis of the 2004 elections the view that there is insufficient empirical evidence, to conclude that South Africa’s democratisation process is imperiled. It maintains that although there are problems related to the to the nature of the party system and some elements of voting behaviour there is enough countervailing evidence revealed by the 2004 election results that this does not present a substantially serious threat to the prospects of South Africa attaining a democratic society.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Political and International Studies2004ThesisMastersMAvi, 85 pagespdfvital:2823http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003033EnglishPrudhomme, Leah Shianne
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic African National Congress
Elections -- South Africa
Voting -- South Africa
Democracy -- South Africa
Political parties -- South Africa
South Africa -- Politics and government -- 1994-
spellingShingle African National Congress
Elections -- South Africa
Voting -- South Africa
Democracy -- South Africa
Political parties -- South Africa
South Africa -- Politics and government -- 1994-
Prudhomme, Leah Shianne
A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
description Two of the post apartheid elections held in South Africa (1994, 1999) have been used as mechanisms to analyse and assess the extent to which the country’s transition from apartheid to a democratic dispensation is succeeding or not. The primary analytical focus of the 1994 and 1999 elections has revolved around the nature of the party system and voting behaviour. Basically, contestation has arisen over two primary and related issues: the dominance of the African National Congress (ANC) weighed against the weakness of opposition parties and the implications that this development has for effective democratic consolidation. Also, whether voting decisions based on divisive racial and ethnic identities that underlie electoral contests are pervasive enough to derail the process of democratisation. Generally, the primary conclusion has been that the unfolding pattern of South African electoral politics indicates sufficient grounds on which to doubt the prospects for effective democratic consolidation. This dissertation engages these debates with particular reference to the 2004 elections. In contrast to this pessimistic view of the prospects of successful democratisation in South Africa it upholds through an analysis of the 2004 elections the view that there is insufficient empirical evidence, to conclude that South Africa’s democratisation process is imperiled. It maintains that although there are problems related to the to the nature of the party system and some elements of voting behaviour there is enough countervailing evidence revealed by the 2004 election results that this does not present a substantially serious threat to the prospects of South Africa attaining a democratic society.
author Prudhomme, Leah Shianne
author_facet Prudhomme, Leah Shianne
author_sort Prudhomme, Leah Shianne
title A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
title_short A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
title_full A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
title_fullStr A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
title_full_unstemmed A democratising South Africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
title_sort democratising south africa?: an analysis of the 2004 national election
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003033
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