Zachariah Mampilly: How protest is redefining democracy around the world
Zachariah Mampilly is an expert on the politics of both violent and non-violent resistance. Full bio
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by the democratic process.
from their daily challenges
are redefining democracy
and academic experts
multiparty electoral competition.
about elites competing at the ballot box.
engage in every day.
about democratic action.
is no longer adequate
to give it a renewed meaning.
are increasingly taking to the streets
have often been at the forefront
to those of who think
Africans engage in politics
are taking to the streets
nonviolent action.
talking to African activists,
type of regime known to humanity.
the president from stealing a third term.
against entrenched monarchies:
where this image was taken,
the conditions for ordinary people.
protest is not exceptional,
to challenge both dictators
democracy itself,
major waves of African protest,
through the third,
in the 1940s and 1950s
a broad coalition in Ghana
for nonviolent movements globally.
in the 1980s and 1990s
that imposed harsh conditions
of autocratic regimes
across the continent.
the shortcomings of the earlier two.
liberation but not democracy,
but only for the elites,
with transforming democracy
like Y'en a Marre in Senegal,
in the Democratic Republic of Congo,
conventional nongovernmental organizations
and political system itself,
like LUCHA's Fred Bauma
from the international community.
from some of the data we collected.
you'll recognize that in 2011,
of this broader wave.
have been successful.
in Tunisia and in Egypt,
presidents from stealing third terms
and Burkina Faso as well.
Africa is both the youngest
between the people and their rulers.
have been growing for over a decade now,
is trickling down.
are actually decreasing,
for people to eke out a living.
are increasingly disconnected
in good jobs for good wages
the hallmark of an advanced society;
political parties by elites
out of civil society
to ordinary people;
that no matter what you do,
to the global economy
to levels unseen in decades.
to exclusionary nationalism,
rather than the powerful.
and Western Europe consider to be new
of African life since the 1970s.
in resistance to these conditions
from African protest democracy?
with ordinary people.
has led to widespread disillusionment.
ordinary people in democratic life.
sexuality, your gender,
able-bodied or disabled,
by rigid electoral cycles.
immediate form of action
and contested processes,
to dismiss protests as riots
of limited political utility.
protests as elementary to democracy.
social movements
new political imaginations may emerge.
outside the lines,
to rewrite the rules of the game
are stacked against them.
have grown up in societies
has ruled their entire lives.
for new possibilities to emerge,
to discover their own power.
of my friend Linda Masarira,
against the Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe.
as she told me a few months ago,
of meaning and direction.
young African activists,
elections and political parties.
beyond what we are told is possible.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Zachariah Mampilly - Political scientistZachariah Mampilly is an expert on the politics of both violent and non-violent resistance.
Why you should listen
Zachariah Mampilly has lived, worked and studied in Africa, South Asia and North America. An expert on the politics of both violent and nonviolent resistance, he is the author of Rebel Rulers: Insurgent Governance and Civilian Life during War (2011), based on extensive fieldwork in rebel-controlled zones of Congo, Sri Lanka and South Sudan. His 2015 book, Africa Uprising: Popular Protest and Political Change (with Adam Branch), examines the ongoing Third Wave of African protest and provides an inside look at recent movements in Ethiopia, Nigeria, Uganda and Sudan.
Mampilly writes widely on South Asian and African politics for a variety of publications, including Al Jazeera, The Hindu, The Washington Post, Foreign Affairs and N+1. He's a professor of political science and Africana studies at Vassar College in New York, and he spent 2012-2013 teaching at the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, as a Fulbright Scholar.
Zachariah Mampilly | Speaker | TED.com