2008
DOI: 10.1080/17531050802058401
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Voting in Kenya: Putting Ethnicity in Perspective

Abstract: Do Kenyans vote according to ethnic identities or policy interests? Based on results from a national probability sample survey conducted in the first week of December 2007, this article shows that, while ethnic origins drive voting patterns, elections in Kenya amount to more than a mere ethnic census. We start by reviewing how Kenyans see themselves, which is mainly in non-ethnic terms. We then report on how they see others, whom they fear will organize politically along ethnic lines. People therefore vote def… Show more

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Cited by 219 publications
(112 citation statements)
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“…While the premise of ethnic-identity voting is straightforward, you vote for the candidate/party from your ethnic group, few studies suggest that this is the sole-determinant of vote-choice in Africa. While authors such as Norris and Mattes (2003), Bratton andKimenyi (2008), Eifertetl al. (2010) or Osei-Hwedi (1998) note the importance of ethnicity in electoral outcomes in certain countries, other authors, such as Basedau and Stroh (2012), Batty (2011) or Lindberg and Morrison (2008) find little evidence that ethnicity drives electoral choice.…”
Section: Explaining Electoral Outcomes In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the premise of ethnic-identity voting is straightforward, you vote for the candidate/party from your ethnic group, few studies suggest that this is the sole-determinant of vote-choice in Africa. While authors such as Norris and Mattes (2003), Bratton andKimenyi (2008), Eifertetl al. (2010) or Osei-Hwedi (1998) note the importance of ethnicity in electoral outcomes in certain countries, other authors, such as Basedau and Stroh (2012), Batty (2011) or Lindberg and Morrison (2008) find little evidence that ethnicity drives electoral choice.…”
Section: Explaining Electoral Outcomes In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On one hand, scholars describe African elections as ethnic head counts (Horowitz, 1985) or emphasize the ethnic factor in African electoral contests (Eifert et al, 2010;Ndegwa, 1997). On the other hand, scholars attempting to tease out ethnicity from typical confounds paint a more nuanced picture of the African voter's decision, highlighting performance evaluation and policy preference instead (e.g., Bratton et al, 2011;Bratton and Kimenyi, 2008;Kimenyi and Romero, 2008;Lindberg and Morrison, 2008;Posner and Simon, 2002). But the fact of the matter is that these observational studies can only speak to the correlation between ethnicity and support; they cannot demonstrate a causal effect.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adams Oloo (2010:40) argues that those identities have played a greater role in recent years, but "large part [s] of the emergent religious, gender and youth identities are conflated with ethnicity and rarely mature into distinct character of their own. " Michael Bratton and Mwangi Kimenyi (2008) Galloping corruption and a steep decline of merit criteria in civil service recruitment contributed to a weakening and informalization of state institutions even as there were donor efforts to repair old and rebuild new formal institutions as part of the reform agenda (Branch & Cheeseman, 2010). One of the most egregious examples of state personnel undermining institutions, in this case the police, was the practice by which politicians backed private militias for "work" at times of elections (see Mueller 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%