Africa Department

Zambia

In the wake of the first peaceful transition in power in Zambia in 1991 through the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), hopes for political reform were quickly dashed. The government acted in an increasingly authoritarian manner, attempting to make up for a lack of democratic legitimation with stronger curbs and restrictions on civil society and trade unions. In addition to legal limits being placed on the latitude for civil society activities, there was a danger that civil society would lose access to the political class and the media that is dependent on it and that its demands would become a dead letter.

The electoral victory of the Patriotic Front (PF) in 2011 changed the political equation. The change in government has developed a political momentum that has opened up opportunities for institutional and legal changes in several fields of policy. And even though the policy of the PF-led government has been exhibiting increasingly authoritarian tendencies, there are social and political actors that are able to once again act as champions of democratic rights. The President of the country and leader of the PF for many years, Michael Sata, died in 2014. Edgar Lungu won the by-election for the remainder of the term, receiving barely 1.7 per cent more votes than his opponent. The following regular Presidential elections were also won by Lungu with 50.3 per cent of the votes cast.

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) has been active in Zambia since the middle of the 1960s. The focus of its commitment there has been on securing and further developing democratic and social standards. It is to this end that the FES supports the political dialogue both between key groups in society as well as between the government and governing party on the one side and important representatives of Zambian society on the other. The FES works in particular with trade unions and civil society actors, among others the Center for Policy Dialogue, the Ministry of Labour and Social Security and the Zambian Congress of Trade Unions.

The FES office in Zambia is furthermore responsible for the regional work line of social policy. Here the FES works together with regional partners such as the Southern African Trade Union Coordination Council (SATUCC) and the Southern African Social Protection Experts Network (SASPEN).

Learn more about our work in Zambia on the project's website.

Publications

African media barometer

A home-grown analysis of the media landscape in Africa : Zambia 2021
Zambia, 2021

Download publication (2,8 MB, PDF-File)


Kabelenga, Isaac; Chola, James

Building universal and sustainable social protection mechanisms for informal economy workers in Zambia

Social protection and COVID-19: impacts on informal economy workers in rural and urban Zambia
Lusaka, 2021

Download publication (2,3 MB, PDF-File)


Kalusopa, Trywell; Koyi, Grayson; Phiri, Francis J.

Rights-based social protection in Africa

Baseline study to map existing informal economy structures in Zambia and their specific needs, report for the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung
Lusaka, 2021

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Zoheb, Khan

Rights-based social protection in Africa

Developing gender-sensititve social protection in Africa: insights from South Africa's child support grant
Lusaka, 2021

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Seekings, Jeremy

Rights-based social protection in Africa

A review of approaches, challenges and possibilities, report for the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
Lusaka, 2021

Download publication (570 KB, PDF-File)


Africa Department

Contact in Germany

Alexander Rosenplänter

Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
Hiroshimastr. 17
10785 Berlin

+49 30-269 35-74 36

E-Mail


Contact in Zambia

Zambia Office

Fritz Kopsieker
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
P.O. Box 30554
Z Lusaka
Zambia

+260-211-29 56 15

+260-211-29 35 57

E-Mail

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