from Africa Program
from Africa Program

The Age of Change

How Urban Youth Are Transforming African Politics 

An approachable guide to the political, social, and demographic changes happening in Africa and why they matter for the rest of the world.

Book
Foreign policy analyses written by CFR fellows and published by the trade presses, academic presses, or the Council on Foreign Relations Press.

More on:

Sub-Saharan Africa

East Africa

West Africa

Aging, Youth Bulges, and Population

Southern Africa

Africa is undergoing an astounding transformation that will usher in a new era of political volatility and experimentation in the coming years. The region is in the midst of a historically unprecedented demographic surge that has skewed the median age in most countries to below twenty years old. This demographic moment coincides with three factors likely to amplify the political agendas of African youth: rapid urbanization, dramatically increased digital connectivity, and increasing recognition that old political narratives are no longer fit for purpose.

Gavin argues that these clear trends will result in an increase in political volatility. Anti-government movements will continue to find new expression, incumbents will be more vulnerable, honeymoon periods for new leaders will be shorter, and transfers of power and leadership will be more frequent. Citizens frustrated by the status quo will show more willingness to experiment with different forms of government and different external partnerships, all with significant implications for those hoping for a global democratic resurgence.

This book explores growing dissatisfaction and desire for change as the political through line emerging on a diverse continent, and illuminates some of the frustrated, defiant, and often humorous pan-African political conversations underway among young, politically engaged populations. What is coming will be dramatically different from the period of political stagnation that has characterized the past two decades in the region, and that also means that major powers like the United States, Russia, and China that are competing for influence in the region will have to change the way they do business.

More on:

Sub-Saharan Africa

East Africa

West Africa

Aging, Youth Bulges, and Population

Southern Africa

Reviews and Endorsements

Michelle Gavin gives us a highly readable but carefully documented insight into the emerging political role of the youth in countries across Africa. Her analysis, including the fascinating use of social media information, illustrates the role this phenomenon plays in the future of Africa and its impact on the world.

Russ Feingold, former U.S. Senator (Wisconsin) and Special Envoy for the African Great Lakes

Michelle Gavin combines a policymaker’s view, a traveler’s curiosity, and an abiding empathy. She has written the rare book that blends together deep research, high-level experience, and a capacity to look at the world through the eyes of young people. The Age of Change is filled with rich detail about Africa’s emerging importance, its ongoing challenges, and the youth who will inevitably shape the future of the continent and the wider world. Read this book if you want to understand African politics and the internal and external forces remaking it.

Ben Rhodes, Former Deputy National Security Advisor of the United States and author of After the Fall: The Rise of Authoritarianism in the World We Made

This is a must-read book for a forward-looking analysis of African politics, and what an increasingly youthful, digitally connected, and urban-based population will mean for disrupting the status quo political regimes. Awareness of the driving forces of such political change and discontinuity suggests new approaches for external powers who wish to build effective relationships-cultivating broader networks with a more diverse set of stakeholders in society and focusing on shared interests with societies rather than a narrow set of elite powerholders. By centering the demands, concerns, and strategies of engagement of young Africans, this book provides a clear view of changes on the horizon, and how foreign policy can adapt to meet the next generation.

Rachel Beatty Riedl, Director of the Center on Global Democracy, Brooks School of Public Policy, Cornell University

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