Elections, Ethnic Polarisation and Managing Post-Electoral Conflict in Kenya

RESEARCH QUESTION

What are the factors that influenced the voting intentions of Kenyans in the General Elections of 2007? What are the causes and consequences of the post-electoral conflict? How can Kenya best achieve reconciliation and reconstruction of the country?

PROJECT

While Kenya has remained fairly stable and peaceful during most of the post-independence period, violence between ethnic groups has tended to erupt around elections since the introduction of competitive multiparty politics. More recently violence and general lawlessness escalated to unprecedented levels following the General Elections in December 2007. The conflict resulted in loss of hundreds of lives, exodus of a quarter of a million people and widespread destruction of property. The unprecedented level of violence that Kenya experienced is just one of the many African examples that raise questions about what factors determine voting behaviour in African countries and whether democracy can have stabilizing effects in countries so tribal dominated.

This research project aims to understand what issues divided Kenyans ahead the General Elections, what are the likely causes and consequences of the post-electoral conflict and how best to achieve the national reconstruction and reconciliation. To this end the study will conduct two nationally representative survey of Kenyans aged 18 and over. The survey conducted before the General election of December 2007 will study the factors that shaped the voting intentions of Kenyans, their views on how the economy is managed, democracy, corruption among other issues. The survey to be conducted in July 2008 will revisit previous respondents to learn about their experiences in the aftermath of the election, their expectations about the new coalition government and whether their views have changed regarding trust among Kenyans, democracy, land conflict, majimbo (decentralization policies).

The overall findings of this project were presented in two workshops held in Nairobi in September 2008. One of the workshops addressed exclusively the Members of Parliament to discuss the issues that divided Kenyans and how to manage post-conflict recovery in Kenya. The second workshop addressed general audiences with the purpose to stimulate the debate on the factors that influenced voting behaviour and how best to achieve the reconciliation of Kenyans. Both workshops included presentations from academics, representatives of civil society and influential Kenyan figures. The Kenyan press reported on the workshop: for example in The Standard and in The Daily Nation

RESEARCHERS

Mwangi S. Kimenyi

University of Connecticut

Roxana Gutiérrez Romero

University of Oxford

Stefan Dercon

University of Oxford

Michael Bratton

Afrobarometer network and Michigan State University

Pedro Vicente

University of Oxford

Tessa Bold

University of Oxford

OUTPUT

An Inquiry into the Use of Illegal Electoral Practices and Effects of Political Violence and Vote-Buying

Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 58 (8), pp. 1500-27, 2014

When Do Voters Sanction Violence? A Vignette Experiment in Kenya

Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero, Adrienne Lebas

APSA, Washington D.C, 28 Aug 2014

An Inquiry into the Use of Illegal Electoral Practices and Effects of Political Violence and Vote-Buying

Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

CSAE Annual Conference, Oxford, 17 Mar 2013

To What Extent Did Ethnicity and Economic Issues Matter in the 2007 Kenyan Elections

Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

Development Policy Review, 31:3, 2013

Understanding electoral violence: Lessons from Kenya

iiG Briefing Paper 23, December 2012

Triggers and Characteristics of the 2007 Kenyan Electoral Violence

Stefan Dercon, Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

World Development, 40:4, April 2012

An Inquiry into the Use of Illegal Electoral Practices and Effects of Political Violence

Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

CSAE Working Paper WPS/2012-16, Nov 2012

Triggers and Characteristics of the 2007 Kenyan Electoral Violence

Stefan Dercon, Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero

CSAE WPS/2010-12

Supporting Democratic Institutions and Clean and Peaceful Elections

iiG Briefing Paper 09, March 2010

Elections and Institutions in Kenya

R. Gutiérrez Romero, M. Kimenyi, P. Collier

in Adam, C. Collier, P. (Eds.) Kenya Policies for Prosperity, Oxford University Press, Nov 2010

Identity, Grievances, and Economic Determinants of Voting in the 2007 Kenyan Elections

Mwangi S. Kimenyi, Roxana Gutierrez Romero

University of Connecticut, Department of Economics Working paper 2008-38, 2008

Tribalism as a Minimax-Regret Strategy: Evidence from Voting in the 2007 Kenyan Elections

Mwangi S. Kimenyi & Roxana Gutierrez Romero

University of Connecticut, Department of Economics Working paper 2008-35, 2008

The 2007 Elections, Post-Conflict Recovery and Coalition Government in Kenya

Roxana Gutiérrez Romero, Mwangi S. Kimenyi, Stefan Dercon

iiG Briefing Paper 01, 26 September 2008

Voting in Kenya: Putting Ethnicity in Perspective

M. Bratton, M. Kimenyi

Journal of East African Studies, 2(2), 272–289, 2008

Ethnicity, Violence and the 2007 Elections in Kenya

S. Dercon, M. Bratton, M Kimenyi, R. Gutiérrez Romero, T. Bold

Afrobarometer Briefing Paper No.48, 2008

Datatset: Kenyan Pre-election Survey December 2007

Kenyan Survey two weeks before Dec 2007 Elections.

Zip file containing: Microsoft Word Codebook file, Stata Data file, PDF Questionnaire file