POLITICS AND LEADERSHIP FATIGUE IN AFRICA. A THEORETICAL APPRAISAL.

Authors

  • Christian Akani Ignatius Ajuru University of Education Rumuolumeni, Rivers State, Nigeria.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24297/ijrem.v7i2.3846

Keywords:

Leadership fatigue, political economy, colonialism, politics, industrialization.

Abstract

Colonialism cannot be forgotten in Africa because of the disorientation and dissonance it enforced. This scenario paved way  for unbridled expropriation  of human and material resources. But, by the beginning of the 1940s African nationalists  rejected the colonial political economy, and  demanded for self governance. The aftermath of their demand engendered a wind of change which swept most African states to statehood in the 1960s. Regrettably, five decades after independence, the continent is still experiencing a free fall  in all human development sectors. Those who inherited political power, rather than ensuring inclusive governance have imposed pain and terror on their people . With an analytical , method the paper argues that politics is squarely responsible for the leadership fatigue in the continent. It concludes that for Africa to have the right leaders they desire, the political institutions must guarantee popular participation.

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Published

2015-07-11

How to Cite

Akani, C. (2015). POLITICS AND LEADERSHIP FATIGUE IN AFRICA. A THEORETICAL APPRAISAL. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN EDUCATION METHODOLOGY, 7(2), 1139–1145. https://doi.org/10.24297/ijrem.v7i2.3846

Issue

Section

Articles