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Parties, Political Finance, and Governance in Africa
Extracting Money and Shaping States in Benin and Ghana

Explains the strategies political parties use to extract money from the state and how these strategies shape government performance.

Rachel Sigman (Author)

9781009262835, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 16 March 2023

332 pages
23.5 x 15.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.65 kg

'This is an essential read for everyone interested in how variations in party institutions and competitive electoral politics drive divergent patterns of politicization of the state in Africa, and beyond. Sigman's 'follow the money' approach meticulously demonstrates how parties' extraction strategies are critical to understanding the current challenges of democratic governance.' Staffan I. Lindberg, University of Gothenburg

A major challenge for the advancement of democratic governance in Africa is the extraction of money by ruling parties from the state to fund their electoral campaigns and gain political advantage over opponents. Drawing upon in-depth case studies of Benin and Ghana, Rachel Sigman considers how, and with what consequences, party leaders control and access public funds to finance their political operations. Weaving together biographical data on government ministers, surveys of civil servants, elite interviews, and archival research, Sigman explains leaders' extraction strategies and connects these strategies to how politicians manage state personnel. In so doing, she challenges the perception of African states as uniformly weak and argues that effective government is possible even in contexts of widespread state politicization, corruption, and clientelism. Demonstrating the profound impact that extractive financing practices have on democratic institutions, Sigman illuminates and develops our understanding of “good governance” across the African continent.

1. The politics of extraction
2. Extraction problems and party solutions
3. Politics and party institutions in Benin and Ghana
4. Extraction strategies in Benin and Ghana
5. Staffing the state for extraction
6. Extraction and the executive
7. Extraction and the bureaucracy
8. Reflections on parties, extraction, and state performance.

Subject Areas: Political campaigning & advertising [JPVL], Political parties [JPL], African history [HBJH]

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