Nic Cheeseman | |
---|---|
Born | Nic Cheeseman |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Oxford |
Awards |
|
Nic Cheeseman is a British political scientist and professor of democracy at the University of Birmingham, working on democracy, elections and African politics. He is also a columnist for the The Africa Report and South Africa's Mail & Guardian, and the editor of the website Democracy in Africa. A regular commentator in the media, he is sometimes referred to by his Twitter handle, @fromagehomme. [1]
Cheeseman read politics, philosophy and economics at the University of Oxford, and then received an MPhil and DPhil in politics from the same university. He was elected as a Cox Fellow at New College, but left in 2006 to take up the position of associate professor of African politics at Jesus College, Oxford. He served as the director of Oxford's African Studies Centre, before moving to the University of Birmingham in January 2017 to become the professor of democracy and international development. [2] In 2022, he became the inaugural Director of the University's new centre of Elections, Democracy, Accountability and Representation.
He has held a number of visiting professorships, including at Sciences Po, the University of Cape Town, and the Australian National University. [3]
Cheeseman's work initially focused on African politics, including his 2015 monograph Democracy in Africa. He subsequently broadened his writing to look at democracy and elections globally, writing Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective with Paul Chaisty and Tim Power, and How to Rig an Election with Brian Klaas. [4]
Further books followed, including Authoritarian Africa: Repression, Resistance and the Power of Ideas, with Jonathan Fisher in 2019, and The Moral Economy of Elections: Democracy, Voting, and Virtue, with Gabrielle Lynch and Justin Willis in 2020. In 2022, Cheeseman established a research project on the history of African political thought. This included co-founding a research network for the study of ideas and ideologies in African politics – IDAP – that seeks to encourage collaborative research on this topic across borders and different generations of scholars. [5]
Cheeseman was co-editor of African Affairs between 2012 and 2016. [6] In 2016, he was appointed founding Editor-in-Chief of Oxford University Press's Oxford Encyclopaedia of African Politics now co-edits a book series on African Politics and International Relations for Oxford University Press. [7]
Between 2013 and 2017, Cheeseman wrote a bi-weekly column for Kenya’s Sunday Nation, covering topics such as elections, decentralization and corruption. [8] In 2017, however, he resigned from the newspaper, along with a number of colleagues, to protest against government censorship. [9] Since then he has written a regular column for the Africa Report, runs a collaboration with The Continent, the Pan-African Magazine, and regularly writes for South Africa's Mail & Guardian newspaper. [10] He also regularly writes for The Economist, [11] Le Monde, [12] Financial Times, [13] Newsweek, [14] the Washington Post, [15] New York Times, [16] and the BBC. [17]
In 2020, Cheeseman was part of a team that founded the Resistance Bureau, an international webinar that aims to promote freedom and resist repression. Its regular shows include activists, leaders and civil society representatives. [18] He also co-edits democracyinafrica.org, a website for academics, policymakers, practitioners and citizens on African politics. [19]
Cheeseman’s doctorate, The rise and fall of civil-authoritarianism in Africa: patronage, participation, and political parties in Kenya and Zambia, [20] was awarded the Arthur McDougall Dissertation Prize by the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom for the Best Dissertation on Elections, Electoral Systems or Representation in 2008.
In 2013, an article on “Rethinking the ‘presidentialism debate’: Conceptualizing coalitional politics in cross-regional perspective”, co-authored with Paul Chaisty and Tim Power, was awarded the CAS Award for the best article published in comparative area studies. [21] How to Rig an Election was selected as one of the books of the year in 2018 by both the Spectator [22] magazine and the Centre for Global Development. [23]
In 2019, Cheeseman won the Joni Lovenduski Prize of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom for outstanding professional achievement by a mid-career scholar. [24] In 2019, the research team that he leads was awarded the ESRC Celebrating Impact Prize for Outstanding International Impact for its work on “Strengthening elections and accountability in new democracies”.
In 2022, Cheeseman was nominated for the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order for How to Rig an Election, and was awarded the Josiah Mason Award for Academic Advancement, the University of Birmingham. [25]
Cheeseman has also been appointed to a number of different positions with international institutions, including being a member of the Advisory Board of the European Democracy Hub: [26] [27] and a member of the International Advisory Council of the Afrobarometer. [28]
Nic Cheeseman | |
---|---|
Born | Nic Cheeseman |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Oxford |
Awards |
|
Nic Cheeseman is a British political scientist and professor of democracy at the University of Birmingham, working on democracy, elections and African politics. He is also a columnist for the The Africa Report and South Africa's Mail & Guardian, and the editor of the website Democracy in Africa. A regular commentator in the media, he is sometimes referred to by his Twitter handle, @fromagehomme. [1]
Cheeseman read politics, philosophy and economics at the University of Oxford, and then received an MPhil and DPhil in politics from the same university. He was elected as a Cox Fellow at New College, but left in 2006 to take up the position of associate professor of African politics at Jesus College, Oxford. He served as the director of Oxford's African Studies Centre, before moving to the University of Birmingham in January 2017 to become the professor of democracy and international development. [2] In 2022, he became the inaugural Director of the University's new centre of Elections, Democracy, Accountability and Representation.
He has held a number of visiting professorships, including at Sciences Po, the University of Cape Town, and the Australian National University. [3]
Cheeseman's work initially focused on African politics, including his 2015 monograph Democracy in Africa. He subsequently broadened his writing to look at democracy and elections globally, writing Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective with Paul Chaisty and Tim Power, and How to Rig an Election with Brian Klaas. [4]
Further books followed, including Authoritarian Africa: Repression, Resistance and the Power of Ideas, with Jonathan Fisher in 2019, and The Moral Economy of Elections: Democracy, Voting, and Virtue, with Gabrielle Lynch and Justin Willis in 2020. In 2022, Cheeseman established a research project on the history of African political thought. This included co-founding a research network for the study of ideas and ideologies in African politics – IDAP – that seeks to encourage collaborative research on this topic across borders and different generations of scholars. [5]
Cheeseman was co-editor of African Affairs between 2012 and 2016. [6] In 2016, he was appointed founding Editor-in-Chief of Oxford University Press's Oxford Encyclopaedia of African Politics now co-edits a book series on African Politics and International Relations for Oxford University Press. [7]
Between 2013 and 2017, Cheeseman wrote a bi-weekly column for Kenya’s Sunday Nation, covering topics such as elections, decentralization and corruption. [8] In 2017, however, he resigned from the newspaper, along with a number of colleagues, to protest against government censorship. [9] Since then he has written a regular column for the Africa Report, runs a collaboration with The Continent, the Pan-African Magazine, and regularly writes for South Africa's Mail & Guardian newspaper. [10] He also regularly writes for The Economist, [11] Le Monde, [12] Financial Times, [13] Newsweek, [14] the Washington Post, [15] New York Times, [16] and the BBC. [17]
In 2020, Cheeseman was part of a team that founded the Resistance Bureau, an international webinar that aims to promote freedom and resist repression. Its regular shows include activists, leaders and civil society representatives. [18] He also co-edits democracyinafrica.org, a website for academics, policymakers, practitioners and citizens on African politics. [19]
Cheeseman’s doctorate, The rise and fall of civil-authoritarianism in Africa: patronage, participation, and political parties in Kenya and Zambia, [20] was awarded the Arthur McDougall Dissertation Prize by the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom for the Best Dissertation on Elections, Electoral Systems or Representation in 2008.
In 2013, an article on “Rethinking the ‘presidentialism debate’: Conceptualizing coalitional politics in cross-regional perspective”, co-authored with Paul Chaisty and Tim Power, was awarded the CAS Award for the best article published in comparative area studies. [21] How to Rig an Election was selected as one of the books of the year in 2018 by both the Spectator [22] magazine and the Centre for Global Development. [23]
In 2019, Cheeseman won the Joni Lovenduski Prize of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom for outstanding professional achievement by a mid-career scholar. [24] In 2019, the research team that he leads was awarded the ESRC Celebrating Impact Prize for Outstanding International Impact for its work on “Strengthening elections and accountability in new democracies”.
In 2022, Cheeseman was nominated for the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order for How to Rig an Election, and was awarded the Josiah Mason Award for Academic Advancement, the University of Birmingham. [25]
Cheeseman has also been appointed to a number of different positions with international institutions, including being a member of the Advisory Board of the European Democracy Hub: [26] [27] and a member of the International Advisory Council of the Afrobarometer. [28]