POLITICS-LAW CONVERGENCE OR DIVERGENCE? 'SMALL' POLITICAL PARTIES, REALPOLITIKAND SOUTH AFRICA'S 20 YEARS OF DEMOCRACY

Authors

  • Kealeboga J Maphunye University of South Africa, WIPHOLD-Brigalia Bam Chair in Electoral Democracy in Africa Department of Political Sciences, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-9515/144

Keywords:

elections, democratic consolidation, democratisation, ‘small’ parties, South Africa, liberal democracy

Abstract

This article examines South Africa's 20-year democracy by contextualising the roles of the 'small' political parties that contested South Africa's 2014 elections. Through the  prism  of South  Africa's  Constitution,  electoral legislation  and the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance, it examines these parties' roles in South Africa's democratisation; their influence,  if any, in parliament, and whether they play any role in South Africa's continental or international engagements. Based on a review of the extant literature, official documents,  legislation, media, secondary research, reports and the results of South Africa's elections, the article relies on game theory, rational choice theory and theories of democracy and democratic consolidation to examine 'small' political parties' roles in the country's political and legal systems. It concludes that the roles of 'small' parties in governance and democracy deserve greater recognition than is currently the case, but acknowledges the extreme difficulty experienced by the 'small'  parties in playing a significant role in democratic consolidation, given their formidable opponent in a one-party dominant system.

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Published

2015-07-29

How to Cite

Maphunye, Kealeboga J. 2015. “POLITICS-LAW CONVERGENCE OR DIVERGENCE? ’SMALL’ POLITICAL PARTIES, REALPOLITIKAND SOUTH AFRICA’S 20 YEARS OF DEMOCRACY”. Journal of Law, Society and Development 2 (1). https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-9515/144.

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Section

Articles
Received 2015-03-17
Accepted 2015-07-22
Published 2015-07-29