Event

Research Group “Acephalous Movements in Sub-Saharan Africa: The real basis for change?”

Join us for a research group discussion featuring Dr. Marta Iñiguez de Heredia (POLIS) and Dr. Justin Pearce (Discussant) on research surrounding acephalous political movements in Sub-Saharan Africa. Since Tahrir Square, horizontal, leaderless and structureless movements have grown around Africa. What seems to be a novelty is that, since the start of the 2010 decade, movements created spontaneously, without a hierarchical structure, have made more impact and have led to more social and political changes than traditionally led and structured movements, let alone political parties. Comparing four movements: Y’en a Marre in Senegal, the campaign against poverty and constitutional reforms in Burkina Faso, the housing movement in South Africa and LUCHA in Eastern DRC , the paper explores the tendency to organise under no or a lose leadership, no or lose structure, and with broad aims for social justice and political change. If means speak about ends, this way of organising is likely to represent not only a challenge to traditional structures of power, but also to how democracy, development and justice are defined and practice.