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The (un)making of opposition coalitions and the challenge of democratization in Ethiopia, 1991–2011
38
Citations
25
References
2011
Year
Regime AnalysisPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesDemocracyTransitional CountriesPolitical SystemAfrican DevelopmentAfrican Social ChangePublic PolicyOpposition CoalitionsAfrican ConflictComparative PoliticsAfrican PoliticsIncumbent RegimesCoalition FormationPolitical ConflictPolitical DevelopmentPolitical PartiesPolitical Science
Abstract A key challenge in the consolidation of a democratic system in transitional countries is the lack of effective opposition political parties to counter the dominance of incumbent regimes. In the case of Ethiopia, to be described in this article, opposition parties are weak, fragmented, and mutually antagonistic. Hence, in order to counter the dominance of the Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), coalitions and alliances have been used by the opposition parties. But opposition coalitions remain unstable and prone to fragmentation due to both internal and external factors. This study analyses the factors responsible to the often repeated fragmentation of opposition coalitions in Ethiopia.
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