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Africa, China, and the Development of Digital Infrastructure Governance: A Case Study of Ghana and Tanzania

Vienna: Central European University, School of Public Policy, Master Thesis (2022), v, 35 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 32-35

"This thesis uses a comparative case study to examine Tanzania and Ghana, two countries where China has contributed or sold large amounts of infrastructure, but who have seen different political reactions to and uses of this infrastructure. It poses the question: how do we explain the differing paths these two emerging democracies take in their political utilization of unregulated digital infrastructure investment? By analyzing elections and regulation in both countries over a period of roughly 15 years, this thesis examines the role that the timing of the introduction of digital infrastructure plays in each country's political reaction. It argues that in Tanzania, where digital infrastructure was adopted later than Ghana, country leaders perceived the internet as a threat to their hold on power and therefore internally developed a 'normal' standard of behavior and governance that was much less open. Ultimately, it concludes that countries combine internal concepts with outside rhetoric, both from China and the Global North, to justify their actions internationally." (Abstract)
1 Introduction, 1
2 Literature Review, 6
3 Method and Case Studies, 13
4 Analysis, 21
5 Conclusion, 29