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      Who needs civil society?

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      research-article
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      Review of African Political Economy
      Review of African Political Economy
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            Abstract

            ‘Civil society’ has become a popular concept in both the analysis of the social bases of recent political change in Africa, and in external policy support for processes of liberal democratic political reform. In the latter case, civil society, as represented by a set of (largely urban) formal organisations and especially by NGOs with external links, is portrayed as the driving force behind and guarantee of democratisation and the containment of the state. Conceptually, however, ‘civil society’ proves to be diffuse, hard to define, empirically imprecise, and ideologically laden. Analytically it is vacuous, and concepts such as class or gender contribute far more to understanding recent political change than can ‘civil society’. Its popularity and continued employment rest on its ideological underpinning, notably on claims that civil society is necessarily distinct from the state, in opposition to the state, and the source of (liberal) democratic values and pressures. It is thus the proponents of liberal democratic reform, notably those external to African polities, that ‘need’ civil society.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            September 1997
            : 24
            : 73
            : 329-337
            Affiliations
            a Politics Department , University of Edinburgh , UK
            Article
            8704266 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 24, No. 73, September 1997, pp. 329-337
            10.1080/03056249708704266
            754d2998-540c-409d-8c56-dcc4ad61fb99

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            History
            Page count
            Figures: 0, Tables: 0, References: 12, Pages: 9
            Categories
            Original Articles

            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

            References

            1. Payer J F. . 1986. . “‘Civil Society in Africa’. ”. In Political domination in Africa . , Edited by: Chabal P. . Cambridge : : CUP. .

            2. Baylies C. . 1995. . ‘"Political Conditionality” and Democratisation’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 65:: 321––37. .

            3. Beckman B and Jega A. . 1995. . ‘Scholars and Democratic Politics in Nigeria’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 64:: 167––81. .

            4. Beckman B. . 1993. . ‘The Liberation of Civil Society: Neo‐Liberal Ideology and Political Theory’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 58:

            5. Bratton M. . 1989. . ‘Beyond the State: Civil Society and Associational Life in Africa’. . World Politics . , Vol. 41((3)): 407––30. .

            6. 1992. . ‘Popular Protest and Political Reform in Africa’. . Comparative Politics . , Vol. 24((4)): 419––42. .

            7. Fowler A. . 1991. . ‘The Role of NGOs in Changing State‐Society Relations: Perspectives from Eastern and Southern Africa’. . Development Policy Review . , Vol. 9((1)): 53––84. .

            8. Gellner E. . 1991. . ‘Civil Society in Historical Context’. . International Social Science Journal . , Vol. 129:: 495––510. .

            9. Kumar K. . 1993. . ‘Civil Society: an Enquiry into the Usefulness of an Historical Term’. . British Journal of Sociology . , Vol. 44((3)): 375––96. .

            10. Marcussen H S. . 1996. . ‘NGOs, the State and Civil Society’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 69:: 405––23. .

            11. Stewart S. . 1997. . ‘Happy ever after in the Marketplace: NGOs and Uncivil Society’. . Review of African Political Economy . , Vol. 71:: 11––34. .

            12. Young T. . 1995. . ‘"A Project to be Realised”: Global Liberalism and Contemporary Africa’. . Millenium . , Vol. 24((3)): 527––46. .

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