
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Nigeria’s Troubled Electoral History Nigeria’s Troubled Electoral History
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A Reform Agenda Emerges A Reform Agenda Emerges
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The 2010 Electoral Reform Act The 2010 Electoral Reform Act
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Voter Registration and Election Procedures Voter Registration and Election Procedures
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Political Parties and Candidate Selection Political Parties and Candidate Selection
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Electoral Appeals, Petitions, and Tenure Electoral Appeals, Petitions, and Tenure
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Accounting for the Drivers of Electoral Reform Accounting for the Drivers of Electoral Reform
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Democratic Progress through Elections in 2011 and 2015 Democratic Progress through Elections in 2011 and 2015
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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24 In the Trenches with Fela: Reassessing Protest Political Music Culture before the Fourth Republic
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20 Drivers and Dynamics of Electoral Reform, 1999–2015
Get accessA. Carl LeVan is Associate Professor in the School of International Service at American University in Washington, DC. He is the author of Nigerian Party Competition in a Time of Transition and Terror (forthcoming) as well as Dictators and Democracy in Africa Development: the Political Economy of Good Governance in Nigeria (2015).
Abiodun Ajijola is the director of Election Monitor in Nigeria.
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Published:07 November 2018
Cite
Abstract
A large body of research examines questions relating to the quality of Nigeria’s elections, focusing on the mechanisms of fraud, the likelihood of violence, or the virtues of administrative reform. After briefly summarizing these issues, this chapter focuses on important reforms contained in a 2010 electoral reform law, such as new rules pertaining to party primaries and requirements to post electoral results at the polling unit level. It then asks why these reforms passed. Most explanations focus on the change of leadership in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). However, the chapter points to reform-minded coalitions in the National Assembly that emerged during presidential leadership crises in 2006 and 2010, as well as important shifts within civil society that increased INEC’s operational latitude and provided political “cover” from partisan interference. The complementary convergence of a coalition for reform inside government and a constituency for reform outside government, were critical to the successful conduct of the 2011 and 2015 elections.
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