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Shrinking Civic Space in Africa: When Governments Crack Down on Civil Society

Das Verschwinden zivilgesellschaftlicher Freiräume in Afrika
[working paper]

Smidt, Hannah

Corporate Editor
GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies - Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien, Institut für Afrika-Studien

Abstract

A growing number of governments in sub-Saharan Africa are now cracking down on civil society organisations addressing human rights issues. Governments are not only shrinking the space for civic activism, but also des­troying the backbone of democracy and inclusive development. In many countries in s... view more

A growing number of governments in sub-Saharan Africa are now cracking down on civil society organisations addressing human rights issues. Governments are not only shrinking the space for civic activism, but also des­troying the backbone of democracy and inclusive development. In many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, civic space has been shrinking since the early 2000s - mirroring a global trend of restrictions being imposed on civil society organisations. Governments intimidate and arrest activists, and publicly criticise their advocacy work. They also promulgate restrictive policies, such as laws that curtail the foreign funding of domestic civil society groups, and resort to subtle ways of restricting civil society's operating space - for instance, via cumbersome registration processes for civil society organisations. Civil society organisations monitor and publicly expose human rights abuses. If governments commit severe abuses, they therefore have an incentive to impose restrictions on civil society activists and to silence their criticism. This incentive is stronger and civil society in greater danger when governments face pressure to live up to international human rights norms - for instance, if they have previously committed to human rights treaties or fear investigation by the International Criminal Court. Isolated and sporadic government restrictions do not silence civil society. Instead, activists protest such restrictions and find creative ways of making human rights violations known - for example, via social media. However there has been a worrying decline in publicly voiced criticism recently as governments impose a large number of different restrictions, ones that render it difficult and indeed dangerous to expose government misbehaviour. The shrinking of civic space calls attention to the unintended consequences of promoting human rights abroad. International pressure to live up to human rights norms has led governments to impose restrictions on domestic civil society activists to silence their criticism. Nevertheless, the current policy shift towards mobilising private investment in selected African countries (per the G20 Compact with Africa) should not deflect international attention from the precarious situation of human rights defenders. Only an independent and active civil society can deepen democracy and guarantee equitable and sustainable economic development in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere.... view less

Keywords
Africa South of the Sahara; civil society; political participation; human rights; government; government policy; domestic policy; political movement; non-governmental organization

Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture

Free Keywords
Verhältnis gesellschaftliche Vereinigung - Staat; innenpolitische Lage und Entwicklung; gesellschaftliche Bewegung

Document language
English

Publication Year
2018

City
Hamburg

Page/Pages
11 p.

Series
GIGA Focus Afrika, 4

ISSN
1862-3603

Status
Published Version; reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
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