Description
This scholarly work explores the critical intersection of political finance, party politics, and state governance in two major West African nations. Rachel Sigman provides a comprehensive analysis of how political parties in Benin and Ghana extract financial resources and leverage them to shape state institutions and policy outcomes.
The book examines the mechanisms through which parties accumulate wealth, the sources of their funding, and how these financial resources translate into political power and institutional influence. Sigman argues that understanding political finance is essential to comprehending democratic governance in Africa, as money flows fundamentally alter party behavior, state capacity, and democratic accountability.
Drawing on extensive fieldwork and empirical research, the author presents case studies that illustrate the complex relationships between party finance, electoral competition, and state development. The work contributes significantly to debates about institutional development, democratic consolidation, and economic governance in sub-Saharan Africa.







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