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The
anatomy of political predation: Leaders, elites and coalitions in
Zimbabwe, 1980-2010
Michael
Bratton and Eldred Masunungure, Developmental Leadership Program
(DLP)
January 31, 2011
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Abstract
This essay offers
an interpretation of the rise and fall of Zimbabwe-s political
economy through the lens of leadership.
Of special interest
are the actions of elite coalitions that link political parties,
the state bureaucracy, and the security sector. We argue that, over
time, the civil-military coalition within Zimbabwe-s former
ruling party placed its own political survival and welfare above
broader developmental goals. In consolidating state power, the rulers
violently suppressed political opposition, engaged in predatory
corruption, and challenged the economic interests of commercial
farming and business elites. In so doing, leaders undermined the
rule of law and alienated the labor movement and civil society,
which went on to form a rival opposition coalition.
The paper also
casts light on the limits of externally driven, hastily negotiated
and reluctantly accepted political settlements. At critical junctures
in the country-s history - notably at independence in
1980 and a Global
Political Agreement in 2008 - leaders entered compromise
power-sharing arrangements. Lacking strong leadership commitments,
however, the rules underpinning political settlements in Zimbabwe
never took root, thus inhibiting the country-s progress toward
democracy and development.
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