• Title of article

    Economic Sanctions: A Panacea to Democracy and Good Governance in Zimbabwe?

  • Author/Authors

    Chingono, Heather School of International Relations and Public Affairs (SIRPA) - Fudan University, Shanghai, China

  • Pages
    25
  • From page
    192
  • To page
    216
  • Abstract
    Against a background of the augmented utilization of economic sanctions as a prescriptive measure to restore/establish democracy in autocratic or semi-autocratic regimes, this article seeks to explore the impact of economic sanctions on Zimbabwe’s democratization process. This article argues that imposing sanctions on Zimbabwe further rendered the prospects of democracy attainment a murky area as reflected by some of the internal and external strategies espoused by the Zimbabwe government in redressing the unintentional manifestations of economic sanctions. Palpably, the use of economic sanctions to induce democracy in Zimbabwe has to a large extent failed, yet, on the contrary it has provided an opportunity, a scapegoat, and a fertile (conducive) platform for the government to further deny citizens their political freedoms whilst blaming it on external forces. This article’s conclusions and results seek to bring out the significant policy implications related to the utilization of sanctions as an apparatus for attaining the political freedoms of people and to reveal some of the unintended outcomes of sanctions.
  • Keywords
    economic sanction , democracy , governance , Zimbabwe
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Record number

    2443596