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Zambia's Second Republic —the Establishment of a One-Party State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Zambia inherited a system of government and administration in 1964 which was ill-suited to the tasks of political development to which her new leaders were dedicated. What little national unity and mobilisation had been achieved in the independence struggle declined with the removal of the common enemy. The Government rested on a fragile base, without the support of agreed rules and practices to limit and contain conflict, and without adequate instruments available for the implementation of its policies. So the search began for a more suitable political system, which could cope with the new needs of independence, and provide for the stability of the state and the survival of the Government.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1974

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References

Page 232 note 1 Cf. Kaunda, Kenneth and Morris, Colin, A Humanist in Africa (London, 1967), pp. 105–9;Google ScholarWina, Sikota in Nshila (Ndola), 13 08 1968;Google Scholar and Republic of Zambia: Debates of the National Assembly (Lusaka), 12 07 1967, cols. 912–1083.Google Scholar

Page 232 note 2 For example at the U.N.I.P. Conference, Mulungushi, August 1967, and at the U.N.I.P. National Council, Lusaka, April 1968.

Page 233 note 1 See Pettman, Jan, Zambia: security and conflict (London, 1974), ch. 2;Google ScholarRasmussen, Thomas, ‘Political Competition and One-Party Dominance in Zambia’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), VII, 3, 10 1969, p. 416;Google Scholar and Tordoff, William, ‘Political Crisis in Zambia’, in Africa Quarterly (New Delhi), x, 3, 1012 1970, pp. 225–36.Google Scholar

Page 233 note 2 The Times of Zambia (Lusaka), 26 08 1969;Google Scholar and Hall, Richard, ‘Zambia's Search for Political Stability’, in The World Today (London), XXV, 11, 11 1969, pp. 488–95.Google Scholar

Page 234 note 1 Cf. The Times of Zambia, 8 December 1971 and 12 February 1972; The Times of Zambia, Business Review (Lusaka), 14 07 and 21 10 1972;Google ScholarMolteno, Robert, ‘Zambia and the One-Party State’, in East Africa Journal (Nairobi), IX, 2, 02 1972, pp. 67;Google Scholar and Rothchild, Donald, ‘Rural–Urban Inequalities in Zambia’, in Journal of Commonwealth Political Studies (Leicester), X, 3, 11 1972, pp. 222–41.Google Scholar

Page 234 note 2 The Times of Zambia, 23 August 1971.

Page 234 note 3 Ibid. 28 August 1971.

Page 234 note 4 Ibid. 10 May and 2 June 1971.

Page 235 note 1 Ibid. 5, 14, and 26 February 1972.

Page 236 note 1 Report of the National Commission on the Establishment of a One-Party Participatory Democracy in Zambia (Lusaka, 1972).Google Scholar See also the reports and comments in The Times of Zambia, 3 March to 17 june 1972.

Page 237 note 1 Ibid. 26 April 1972.

Page 238 note 1 Ibid. 25 March and 1 September 1972.

Page 238 note 2 Ibid. 10 July, 2 August, 2 September, and 17 October 1972.

Page 239 note 1 Ibid. 2 October 1972.

Page 239 note 2 Report of the National Commission on the Establishment of a One-Party Participatory Democracy in Zambia. Summary of Recommendations Accepted by the Government (Lusaka, 1972).Google Scholar

Page 239 note 3 The Times of Zambia, 18 December 1972.

Page 240 note 1 The Constitution of Zambia Act, 1973.

Page 240 note 2 Summary of Recommendations Accepted by the Government.

Page 241 note 1 The Constitution of the United National Independence Party, annexed to the Constitution of Zambia Act, 1973.

Page 241 note 2 The Times of Zambia, 28 September and 8 October 1972; and The Times (London), 26 08 1972.Google Scholar

Page 242 note 1 The Times of Zambia, 27–29 August 1973.

Page 243 note 1 Ibid. 23 January, 6 March, 6 April, and 14 August 1973.

Page 243 note 2 A.A.P.-Reuters, 6 December 1973; and The Times, 7 and 8 December 1973.

Page 243 note 3 Ibid. 20 December 1971. Cf. Molteno, loc. cit. pp. 13–15.

Page 244 note 1 Rasmussen suggests, loc. cit. p. 416, that the main area of political competition since independence has been within U.N.I.P., rather than between it and opposition parties, and that it is ‘likely to experience special problems in direct proportion to its success in reducing political competition outside itself’.