The Relationship between Political Dynamism and Implementation of Foreign Policy in African Countries.
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Date
2022-11Author
Bambo, Bilali Charles
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Political dynamism is critical in foreign policy enactment in any country in the world, including
Africa. Most countries have tried to implement its foreign policy differently without looking at
political dynamism which is instrumental in the orientation of foreign policy of any given country.
However, the concept of political dynamism has been viewed with different lenses by different
scholars, but with the common understanding that “dynamism” implies application of different
perspectives to evaluate existing or potential political situation. The study examined the
relationship between political dynamism and implementation of foreign policy in African
countries. Specifically, the study focused on the influence of political system, interest groups,
leadership traits, and public opinion on implementation of foreign policy in Africa. The study was
anchored on rational choice theory, advocacy coalition framework theory, and punctuated
equilibrium theory. It adopted descriptive research design and involved a target population of 195
individuals comprising of diplomats, political parties, ministry of foreign affairs and civil society.
Sampling was carried out using stratified sampling technique where 100 respondents were
selected. Collection of primary data was carried out using a structured questionnaire where
collected data was analyzed using descriptive and inferential methods. Analyzed data was
presented using frequency distribution tables, figures and narratives. The findings revealed that
political system significantly influenced policy making processes and implementation. Countries
with stronger and stable political system in Africa tended to have vibrant foreign policy debates
without fear of losing favour in the international community. However, challenges such as mega
corruption and neocolonialism in most African states continue to affect foreign policy direction.
Interest groups have continued to play a central role in petitioning governments of the day to
implement certain policy documents favourable to the masses as opposed to the ruling class. But,
there is the question of corruption and suppression of outdated political culture which were likely
to ruin foreign policy implementation of a country. Leaders with certain characteristics, such as
dictatorial tendencies, corruption mentality, emotional instability, and human rights abuse records
tend to oversee or favour subjective foreign policy orientations. Leaders with condensing attitude,
limited emotional intelligence, questionable integrity, and tough-headedness tend to pursue narrow
and self-serving foreign policy directions at the expense of their citizens. Public opinion continues
to play a central role in swaying views and influencing key decisions of political parties, political
systems, and top leadership of the country, hence shaping their foreign policy direction. Inferential
statistics also indicated that each of the four independent variables significantly and positively
influenced foreign policy implementation in African countries. A number of recommendations
were made, including for the African countries to allow alternative voices in political system for
robust policy debates and implementation. Interest groups should also be allowed by the
government of the day to operate freely so that they can participate in foreign policy
implementation in an objective manner. Despite varied leadership traits in all leaders, foreign
policy implementation should involve objective processes devoid of personal influences. Public
opinion should be allowed to proactively shape foreign policy formulation and implementation in
Africa.
Publisher
KeMU