Jointly sponsored by the 1818 Society Governance and History Thematic Groups
Hybrid: MC 4 -300 and via Webex
Africa needs fresh thinking on its leadership and governance challenges, particularly when it comes to the disconnects between traditional leadership models and governance structures within the modern state.
In this open access book, Kofi Anani finds ways forward through the Blended Representation Principle (BRP), which stipulates that power be shared between leaders selected on the basis of Western-democratic ideals and leaders chosen on the basis of traditional African norms and conventions. Drawing on his research and professional experience, Anani shows how incorporating the BRP into African leadership and governance thinking would encourage more voluntary public participation in politics, guarantee transparency and accountability in decision-making, particularly when it comes to the use of public resources, and ultimately encourage more public confidence in leaders. Anani also provides concrete suggestions for how to achieve all this, not through quick fixes, but rather through educational campaigns directed at public officials and through new communities of learning and practice designed to champion the BRP in villages, schools, workplaces, places of worship, and other social organizations.
This book is a must-read for all scholars and students of postcolonial governance and leadership, and it is of keen interest to anyone concerned with how Western-style state-making might ultimately find a balance with other, indigenous modes of social organization.
Speaker: Kofi Vincent Anani is a Managing Partner of the Anani-Afele Network (https://www.anani-afelenetwork.org/), “a Think-and-do-Tank” dedicated to utilizing blended knowledge for transformative development in Africa. He has spent more than two decades working in international development. He worked in Development Finance at the World Bank in Washington, DC; worked in post-conflict reconstruction at the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), and served for five years as Executive Secretary of the Ghana Refugees Board (2015-2020). Kofi holds a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of Ghana, Legon (1987); masters and doctorate degrees in International Development from the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada (1999).
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