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The politics of continuity and collusion in Zanzibar: political reconciliation and the establishment of the Government of National Unity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2018

Sterling Roop*
Affiliation:
P.O. Box 3981 Telluride, CO 81435, USA
Kjetil Tronvoll*
Affiliation:
Bjørknes University College, Lovisenberg gt. 13, 0456 Oslo, Norway
Nicodemus Minde*
Affiliation:
United States International University – Africa, P.O. Box 14636–00800, Nairobi, Kenya

Abstract

The popularity of unity governments to settle both internal political divisions and outright conflict has grown in the last 20 years. However, more often than not unity governments fail to mitigate the political dynamics baked into the political economies and suffer from being insufficiently anchored in local society. The Government of National Unity (GNU) in Zanzibar, formed in 2010 as the culmination of the ‘maridhiano’ political reconciliation process and following numerous attempts at reconciliation led to initial successes, is a case in point. Zanzibar's GNU turned out to be ‘position’ rather than ‘power’ sharing, constitutionalised through a hybrid format of the politics of continuity and collusion. As such the position sharing system broke down when voters in the 2015 election sought neither continuity nor collusion, but transformational change of governance. This was in turn blocked by veto actors in favour of continuity, resulting in the collapse and discontinuation of the GNU in Zanzibar.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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