Kenneth Alfred Good is an Australian academic and formerly Professor of Political Science at the University of Botswana. He specializes in the analysis of the political economy of African and Melanesian nations. In 2005 he was ejected from Botswana for criticizing the government, later winning a favorable judgement from the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
A long-standing theme of Good's research has been the tendency of elites to derail democracy in developing countries. In his latter years in Botswana, Good, along with other human rights researchers, identified the expulsion of the San Bushmen from their homelands as being linked to state and commercial interests wishing to exploit diamond reserves, and also questioned the Presidential succession rules and the lack of coherent opposition to the ruling Botswana Democratic Party, which wins every election. In 2014 he published a major work of synthesis supporting participatory democracy worldwide.
Removal from Botswana
In May 2005 Good co-authored a book chapter "Unpacking the 'Model': Presidential Succession in Botswana", with Ian Taylor. He was later declared a Prohibited Immigrant and, after unsuccessful legal challenges, escorted to the South African border. No official reason was given for his expulsion. After some months in Europe, Good returned to Australia, where he had not lived since the 1970s, leaving behind his daughter who was finishing school. Good later took his case to the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights. In May 2010 they handed down their judgement in Good's favour: "...the Commission finds that Botswana has violated Articles 1, 2, 7.1.a, 9, 12.4 and 18.1 & 18.2 of the African Charter. 244. The Commission recommends: 1. that the Respondent State provides adequate compensation to the victim for the loss and cost he has incurred as a result of the violations. The compensation should include but not be limited to remuneration and benefits he lost as a result of his expulsion, and legal costs he incurred during litigation in domestic courts and before the African Commission. The manner and mode of payment of compensation shall be made in accordance with the pertinent laws of the Respondent State; and 2. The Respondent State should take steps to ensure that Sections 7, 11 and 36 of the Botswana Immigration Act and its practices conform to international human rights standards, in particular, the African Charter." The Government of Botswana has not implemented these judgements.
Main publications
Good, K.A. 2014. Trust in the Capacities of the People, Distrust in Elites. New York: Lexington Books.
Good, K.A. 2008. . Oxford and Johannesburg: James Currey and Jacana Media.
Good, K.A. 2002. The Liberal Model and Africa: Elites Against Democracy. London: Palgrave.
Good, K.A. 1997. Realising Democracy in Botswana, Namibia and South Africa. Pretoria: Africa Institute.
Good, K.A. and M. Donaldson. 1988. Articulated Agricultural Development: Traditional and Capitalist Agricultures in Papua New Guinea. Aldershot, Gower Publishing.
Good, K.A. 1986. Papua New Guinea: A False Economy. Indigenous Peoples and Development Series, no. 3. London: The Anti-Slavery Society.