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This book explores the resilience and longevity of President Yoweri Museveni’s regime in Uganda, tracing the evolution of the National Resistance Army (NRA) from a victorious insurgency into one of Africa’s most enduring authoritarianregimes. It challenges the assumption that the NRA’s 1986 victory in Uganda marked a complete institutional rupture. Instead, the book argues that the NRA —later institutionalized as the National Resistance Movement (NRM)—governed within a residual social landscape shaped by entrenched traditional monarchies, religious institutions, landed elites, and historic political parties that survived Uganda’s civil wars. Confronted with these deeply rooted social forces, the NRM regime was compelled to fuse coercion with co-optation, selective patronage, and strategic concessions. This hybrid approach produced a civil-authoritarian order in which political control is sustained not only through repression, but also through co-optation, negotiation, and accommodation of powerful societal interests. By foregrounding the interplay between state power and enduring social structures, the book contributes to comparative debates on authoritarianism, state-building, and post-conflict governance in Africa and beyond.
Gerald Bareebe is an Associate Professor in the Department of Politics at York University in Toronto, Canada. His research and teaching focus on politics and government, international relations, civil wars, and the comparative politics of the Global South. He holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Toronto, as well as master’s degrees in international relations from Makerere University and in Governance and Development from the University of Antwerp.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1: Social Structures and Regime Evolution in Post Conflict Uganda.- Chapter 2: Building Power from the Periphery: The Rise and Consolidation of the NRM Regime.- Chapter 3: From Rebels to Regime Allies: Coercion, Co-optation, and Neutralization of Armed Rivals.- Chapter 4: Between Coercion and Accommodation: Authoritarian Bargains in Uganda’s Political Settlement.- Chapter 5: Militarization, Patronage, and State Building after Civil War.- Chapter 6: Visible but Powerless: Politics, Opposition, and Social Group Containment under the NRM.- Chapter 7: Outsourcing Repression: Vigilantes and Third Party Violence under the NRM.- Chapter 8: Rethinking Postwar Authoritarianism: Lessons and Implications from the NRM Regime.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Gerald Bareebe is an Associate Professor in the Department of Politics at York University in Toronto, Canada. His research and teaching focus on politics and government, international relations, civil wars, and the comparative politics of the Global South. He holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Toronto, as well as master’s degrees in international relations from Makerere University and in Governance and Development from the University of Antwerp.
Zusammenfassung
This book explores the resilience and longevity of President Yoweri Museveni’s regime in Uganda, tracing the evolution of the National Resistance Army (NRA) from a victorious insurgency into one of Africa’s most enduring authoritarian regimes. It challenges the assumption that the NRA’s 1986 victory in Uganda marked a complete institutional rupture. Instead, the book argues that the NRA —later institutionalized as the National Resistance Movement (NRM)—governed within a residual social landscape shaped by entrenched traditional monarchies, religious institutions, landed elites, and historic political parties that survived Uganda’s civil wars. Confronted with these deeply rooted social forces, the NRM regime was compelled to fuse coercion with co-optation, selective patronage, and strategic concessions. This hybrid approach produced a civil-authoritarian order in which political control is sustained not only through repression, but also through co-optation, negotiation, and accommodation of powerful societal interests. By foregrounding the interplay between state power and enduring social structures, the book contributes to comparative debates on authoritarianism, state-building, and post-conflict governance in Africa and beyond.