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About Richard Dowden

Richard Dowden is director of the Royal African Society.

Articles by Richard Dowden

Wednesday 4th May

Richard Dowden



When I passed my 100th birthday last year, I thought back to those terrible days when millions of people were afraid to speak their minds, and oppressive paranoid governments gripped and strangled whole societies, whole nations, telling people that any criticism of them would bring down the whole structure, create anarchy. How did it change? People all over the world lost their fear. They began to believe in themselves. That Tunisian fruit and veg seller, Mohammed Bouazizi, was one of the first. After that all over the world people realised that life without freedom was no life at all. And when the most powerful country on the planet finally accepted democracy after 70 years of communist rule, dictatorship finally died.

Emir Ben Ayed/Demotix
Thursday 23rd February

Yoweri Museveni: running on empty

Uganda's president is likely to be re-elected, but his political project is exhausted, reports Richard Dowden in Kampala.
Tuesday 6th December

In search of Ugandan democracy

The story of Yoweri Museveni’s transformation from model African leader to authoritarian ruler seems familiar. But the reality is different and more interesting, says Richard Dowden.
Monday 25th July

What's wrong with Africa

“Africa’s winner-takes-all politics lie at the heart of everything that has gone wrong with the continent.” Richard Dowden, director of the Royal Africa Society, draws essential policy lessons from Africa’s modern history.
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