Capitalized rallies: why campaigns costs are rising and rallies are hybridizing in Tanzania

Daniel Paget* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
1 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Campaign costs have risen in Africa. I ask: what has driven this cost inflation? Studies of Western parties attribute it to campaign modernization as mediatization. Studies of African parties do not recognize this campaign advancement. They attribute these it to another cause: spiraling clientelism. I argue that there is a third, hitherto overlooked driver of such inflation and adaptation: the hybridization of rallies with capital-intensive practices. This capitalization of rally production amounts to an alternative form of campaign modernization which diverges from those found in the global north. I trace this
process in Tanzania, but this theory has wider reach. Many African campaigns are rally intensive and have fewer authoritarian retardants of party competition than Tanzania. This makes it likely that other countries’ experiences resembled or surpassed Tanzania’s in Africa and beyond. Altogether, I demonstrate that there is ongoing innovation at rallies which is driving significant rises in campaign costs.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages12
JournalParty Politics
Early online date17 Jul 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 17 Jul 2023

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgements
Thanks to Party Politics editor Paul Webb and the anonymous reviewers. Thanks go to all of those that gave feedback on this paper at the University of Oxford African Studies Seminar (2017), the (USA) African Studies Association Annual Meeting (2017, Boston), the Working Group on African Political Economy (LSE, 2020). Thanks go to Michaela Collord and Barnaby Dye, who both gave feedback on prior versions of this paper. Thanks to my doctoral examiners Robin Harding and Cristian Vaccari, who did the same. Special thanks, for as always to my doctoral supervisor Nic Cheeseman. The utmost thanks go to all those in Tanzania whose insights and help made this research possible. Any errors are mine alone.

Data Availability Statement

No data availability statement.

Keywords

  • rallies
  • election campaign
  • communication technology
  • mediatization
  • African politics

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