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For decades, the standard explanation for Africa’s weak institutions has barely changed. The story goes like this: corruption is the root cause of institutional failure, and the solution is anti-corruption drives, legal reforms, and stronger oversight bodies. But this diagnosis is shallow. It treats corruption as the disease, when in fact corruption is only a symptom – the real disease is something deeper, something far more difficult to confront: a crisis of national cohesion.
In many African countries, public institutions are not viewed as neutral custodians of the common good. They are perceived as extensions of whichever ethnic or regional group holds power. National identities are saturated with emotion – they offer refuge from the fear of erasure and the longing for belonging, meaning, and permanence. In deeply divided multiethnic societies, these powerful emotions are often anchored in the ethnic community rather than the broader nation, making it far harder to build a shared national identity – and by extension, the strong, trusted institutions that rely on it. Institutions like the courts, the police, or even tax authorities are viewed not through the lens of fairness, but as weapons to be wielded in the ongoing struggle for ethnic and political dominance. This perception is not paranoia; it is a rational response to how power has actually been used.
Trust is the lifeblood of any functioning institution. Citizens obey laws, pay taxes, and follow court rulings because they trust that those laws, taxes, and rulings apply equally to everyone. But in societies fractured along ethnic, religious, or regional lines, trust does not come easily. In these settings, every government policy, every public contract, and every police action is interpreted through the lens of, “Whose turn is it to eat?” In such environments, public office becomes a tool for ethnic survival. Corruption thrives because it is seen not as an ethical failure, but as a necessary act of group self-defence.
Diversity itself is not the enemy of good governance. Countries like Canada and Switzerland are diverse, though not nearly as complex in their diversity as countries like Kenya. Even so, they have managed to build strong, trusted institutions. The key difference is that these countries actively invested in building mechanisms to manage diversity – from clear rules for federal power-sharing, to inclusive national narratives, to deliberate policies that ensure no community feels permanently excluded from the state. In Africa, by contrast, many nations inherited colonial borders that forced together communities with no common sense of nationhood.
Cohesion was at the very heart of the classic models of nation-building seen in Europe and Latin America during the 19th century. These models relied on a set of tried-and-tested levers to forge a unified, homogenous national community. Among the most effective tools was the imposition of a single national language, enforced through the school system and popular media. Governments also cultivated national pride by promoting a shared national history, complete with heroes, monuments, and rituals that reinforced collective memory. The commemoration of victories and defeats in past wars further strengthened the national bond. Economic integration was equally important – states deliberately fostered a national market led by a strong domestic bourgeoisie, supported by national infrastructure and a welfare system that served all citizens equally. Even sports and cultural mega-events, from national football leagues to global spectacles, became vehicles for mass participation in displays of national pride. This cohesion-first approach created nations where citizens could see themselves reflected in the state – a crucial foundation for the development of strong, trusted institutions.
After independence, few African governments made serious efforts to build that sense of shared belonging. National identity projects were either half-hearted or blatantly manipulated for political gain. This historical context matters. African states were never designed to be nations – they were administrative zones drawn up in European capitals, with little regard for local realities. Pre-existing ethnic and cultural boundaries were ignored and, overnight, these colonial administrative units became international borders under the principle of _uti possidetis_ (“as you possess”). To maintain control, colonial powers governed through divide-and-rule tactics, deliberately fostering mistrust between communities. At independence, this legacy of suspicion and fragmentation was passed directly to new African governments, many of which continued the practice, ruling through ethnic patronage rather than building genuinely inclusive national identities.
This is why the obsession with fighting corruption through technical fixes – new laws, anti-corruption commissions, and transparency programmes – rarely works. These tools assume a level of institutional trust that simply does not exist. In fragmented societies, where citizens do not believe the state represents everyone equally, no anti-corruption law will convince people to stop looting when they finally gain access to power. In such environments, corruption is not greed – it is insurance, a survival strategy in a hostile system.
Countries with stronger national cohesion, which in many cases are also largely monoethnic, have a clear advantage when it comes to building effective institutions. Japan, Korea, Estonia, and Tunisia are not corruption-free, but their institutions work far better because citizens in these countries fundamentally believe that the state belongs to them all. The collapse of the Soviet Union largely followed ethnic fault lines, and in its aftermath, the former Soviet states took divergent approaches to nation-building.
Countries like Estonia and Latvia pursued monolithic national policies, anchoring citizenship and national identity in their dominant ethnic groups and other cultural assimilation measures for non-titular populations. By contrast, some neighbouring states adopted a more inclusive civic approach, granting automatic citizenship to all residents present in 1991, regardless of ethnicity. Interestingly, the countries that pursued strong, monolithic national identities – such as Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania – have consistently outperformed many of their more inclusive peers, both economically and institutionally. Even authoritarian regimes like China benefit from this dynamic. China’s governance machine is heavily built on Han Chinese identity, creating a sense – accurate or not – that the state is an extension of “us”. This makes it easier to enforce laws and mobilise resources because people, for the most part, trust that the system, however harsh, is at least theirs.
Tanzania offers a rare African example of intentional nation-building. Julius Nyerere’s aggressive promotion of Kiswahili as a national language and his push for a pan-ethnic national identity helped Tanzania avoid some of the worst ethnic conflicts that plagued its neighbours. While Tanzania still struggles with governance, it has maintained a level of social cohesion that many African countries envy.
In countries without strong national cohesion, diversity often plays out like a silent civil war – not with bullets, but through the quiet sabotage of government projects, ethnic gatekeeping in hiring, and the constant undermining of institutions perceived to be controlled by rival groups. Development projects are resisted if they are seen as benefiting “the others”. Public jobs are distributed as ethnic rewards. Even private investment decisions are shaped by ethnic trust networks, creating parallel economies that exclude anyone from the wrong community.
For a striking example of this cohesion deficit at work, look no further than Kenya’s recent Gen Z Revolution – the powerful wave of protests triggered by the controversial 2024 Finance Bill. In a rare display of unity across ethnic and class divides, young Kenyans mobilised en masse, using social media to organise peaceful protests against government excesses. For a brief moment, it seemed as though the country’s youth had found a common voice, one that cut across the usual tribal fault lines.
But when the protests reached their peak and the need for structured leadership emerged, the movement stumbled. No one could agree on who should speak for the protesters. Every individual who tried to step forward as a spokesperson was immediately suspected of personal ambition, tribal bias, or hidden political agendas. Anyone who suggested dialogue with the government – even on terms favourable to the protesters – was cast as a sellout. Politicians, regardless of their party affiliation, were rejected outright, as no one trusted them to negotiate in good faith.
In the end, the movement lost steam – not because the grievances disappeared, but because deep societal mistrust made sustained action impossible. The very lack of cohesion that weakens Kenya’s institutions also prevented the formation of a trusted platform for negotiation and leadership. This is a textbook example of what happens when a society lacks both a unifying national identity and faith in its political system: even mass anger cannot translate into structured political action.
The Gen Z movement, despite its energy and creativity, became a victim of the same trust deficit that cripples Kenya’s public institutions. Without a common story that binds citizens together – and without institutions that everyone believes will act fairly – even grassroots mobilisation struggles to transform into lasting change. In a way, the fate of the Gen Z protests is a microcosm of the larger governance crisis Kenya and much of Africa faces – a state that no one fully trusts, representing a nation that no one fully believes exists.
This is why development strategies that focus purely on technical governance reforms are destined to fail. Before good governance can take root, there must be good nationhood – a sense of shared fate, built on a common story, inclusive language, and fair resource distribution. These are not cultural niceties. They are core development infrastructure, just as essential as roads and power lines.
The experience of South Africa and the United States makes this point painfully clear. Both countries are praised for their democratic institutions, yet both built these institutions during eras of enforced homogeneity. In the US, core institutions were established when Black people were enslaved, indigenous populations displaced, and minorities excluded through Jim Crow laws. In South Africa, apartheid designed institutions to serve a white minority at the expense of the black majority. Today, both countries are grappling with the fallout: how do you convince historically excluded groups to trust institutions that were never designed for them? In the US, this is why many Black Americans mistrust the police, the courts, and the banking system. In South Africa, a similar dynamic now plays out in reverse – many white South Africans fear that today’s institutions, now led by a black majority, will treat them unfairly.
The pattern is clear: when institutions are built in exclusion, they struggle to gain legitimacy in inclusion. This creates a fragile kind of cohesion – diversity on paper, but deep mistrust in practice. South Africa and the United States, for all their differences, are both experiments in whether institutions born in exclusion can be re-engineered to serve everyone fairly.
This leaves fragile, post-colonial states with a difficult choice. Can they build strong national cohesion without suppressing ethnic or regional identities? Is the messy, unpredictable path of democracy always preferable to the more controlled cohesion enforced by authoritarian regimes? Some countries, like Rwanda and China, have opted for the latter – tightly controlled national narratives, backed by repression of dissent. This approach delivers cohesion, but at the cost of freedom. On the other hand, democracies that ignore cohesion entirely risk descending into ethnic clientelism, corruption, and institutional collapse.
Ultimately, the path to cohesion matters as much as the cohesion itself. The real challenge for African countries is to build unity through inclusion, not coercion; unity based on shared opportunity, fair development, and an honest, inclusive story of who they are. This is hard work, but the alternative is clear. Countries that fail to build national cohesion will continue to recycle the same cycle of ethnic conflict, weak institutions, and developmental stagnation – no matter how many anti-corruption commissions they create.