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Periodical article Periodical article Leiden University catalogue Leiden University catalogue WorldCat catalogue WorldCat
Title:Urban protest in Burkina Faso
Author:Harsch, ErnestISNI
Year:2009
Periodical:African Affairs: The Journal of the Royal African Society
Volume:108
Issue:431
Pages:263-288
Language:English
Geographic term:Burkina Faso
Subjects:municipal government
protest
decentralization
External link:https://www.jstor.org/stable/27667122
Abstract:Burkina Faso has embarked on a course of decentralization in which elected local governments are assuming a share of decisionmaking over a range of services and activities previously under central authority. But many of these municipalities have also become sites and targets of popular contestation, a reality that has rarely been acknowledged in the official discourses of decentralized governance. By employing social movement research methods, this article examines more than 200 public demonstrations, marches, sit-ins, strikes, riots, and other forms of protest over local issues in 31 of Burkina's urban municipalities, from 1995 to 2007. It finds that both local government reactions and the protests themselves are strongly influenced by the national political context. The analysis highlights some of the main grievances raised by protesters, from opposition to police violence and merchants' frustrations over the management of marketplaces, to residents' concerns about municipal corruption and resistance to neighbourhood displacement resulting from urban 'modernization' schemes. By challenging the performance of Burkina's municipal councils and mayors, ordinary residents are exercising 'voice' and seeking to give some real substance to notions of participatory decentralization. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]
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