Reconfiguring Ethiopia: The Politics of
Authoritarian Reform
This book takes stock of political reform in Ethiopia and the transformation of Ethiopian society since the adoption of multi-party politics and ethnic federalism in 1991. Decentralization, attempted democratization via ethno-national representation, and partial economic liberalization have reconfigured Ethiopian society and state in the past two decades. Yet, as the contributors to this volume demonstrate, democracy in Ethiopia has not changed the authority structures and the culture of centralist decision-making of the past. The political system is tightly engineered and controlled from top to bottom by the ruling Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). Navigating between its 1991 announcements to democratie the country and its aversion to power-sharing, the EPRDF has established a de facto one-party state that enjoys considerable international support. This ruling party has embarked upon a technocratic developmental state trajectory ostensibly aimed at depoliticizing national policy and delegitimizing alternative courses. The contributors analyze the dynamics of authoritarian state-building, political ethnicity, electoral politics and state-society relations that have marked the Ethiopian polity since the downfall of the socialist Derg regime. Chapters on ethnic federalism, revolutionary democracy, opposition parties, the press, the judiciary, state-religion, and state-foreign donor relations provide the most comprehensive and thought-provoking review of contemporary Ethiopian national politics to date.
This book is based on a special issue of the Journal of Eastern African Studies.
Jon Abbink, Ph.D. in social anthropology (1985), is Senior Researcher at the African Studies Centre, Leiden, and Research Professor of African Studies at VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. He recently co-edited Land, Law and Politics in Africa. Mediating Conflict and Reshaping the State (Brill, 2011) and The Anthropology of Elites (Palgrave, 2012).
Tobias Hagmann, Ph.D. in public administration (2007), is Associate Professor in International Development at Roskilde University in Denmark. He is co-editor of Contested Power in Ethiopia: Traditional Authorities and Multi-Party Elections (Brill, 2012) and Negotiating Statehood: Dynamics of Power and Domination in Africa (Wiley Blackwell, 2011).
Reconfiguring Ethiopia:
The Politics of Authoritarian
Reform
Edited by
Jon Abbink and Tobias Hagmann
First published 2013
by Routledge
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Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
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2013 Taylor & Francis
This book is a reproduction of the Journal of Eastern African Studies, vol. 5, issue 4.
The Publisher requests to those authors who may be citing this book to state, also, the bibliographical details of the special issue on which the book was based.
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN13: 978-0-415-81387-7
Typeset in Times New Roman
by Cenveo Publisher Ltd
Publishers Note
The publisher would like to make readers aware that the chapters in this book may be referred to as articles as they are identical to the articles published in the special issue. The publisher accepts responsibility for any inconsistencies that may have arisen in the course of preparing this volume for print.
Contents
Tobias Hagmann and Jon Abbink
Jon Abbink
Sarah Vaughan
Jean-Nicolas Bach
Asnake Kefale
Assefa Fiseha
Nicole Stremlau
Rony Emmenegger, Sibilo Keno and Tobias Hagmann
Jrg Haustein and Terje steb
Fekadu Adugna
Dereje Feyissa
The chapters in this book were originally published in the Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
The politics of authoritarian reform in Ethiopia, 1991 to 2012
Tobias Hagmann and Jon Abbink
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 579595
Ethnic-based federalism and ethnicity in Ethiopia: reassessing the experiment after 20 years
Jon Abbink
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 596618
Revolutionary democratic state-building: party, state and people in the EPRDFs Ethiopia
Sarah Vaughan
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 619640
Abyotawi democracy: neither revolutionary nor democratic, a critical review of EPRDFs conception of revolutionary democracy in post-1991 Ethiopia
Jean-Nicolas Bach
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 641663
The (un)making of opposition coalitions and the challenge of democratization in Ethiopia, 19912011
Asnake Kefale
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 681701
Separation of powers and its implications for the judiciary in Ethiopia
Assefa Fiseha
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 702715
The press and the political restructuring of Ethiopia
Nicole Stremlau
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 716732
Decentralization to the household: expansion and limits of state power in rural Oromiya
Rony Emmenegger, Sibilo Keno and Tobias Hagmann
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 733754
EPRDFs revolutionary democracy and religious plurality: Islam and Christianity in post-Derg Ethiopia
Jrg Haustein and Terje steb
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 755772
Overlapping nationalist projects and contested spaces: the Oromo-Somali borderlands in southern Ethiopia
Fekadu Adugna
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 773787
Aid negotiation: the uneasy partnership between EPRDF and the donors
Dereje Feyissa
Journal of Eastern African Studies, volume 5, issue 4 (November 2011) pp. 788817
Tobias Hagmann * and Jon Abbink #