ABSTRACT This article applies a four‐dimensional analytical framework to re‐evaluate Nelson Mandela's presidency (1994–1999). The framework distinguishes tensions and synergies across four key domains of leadership: executive and symbolic, party and state, international and domestic, and formal versus informal. Mandela, while symbolically powerful and globally revered, was a weak executive leader who delegated core governing responsibilities to his deputy. He failed to challenge the ANC's fusion of party and state, endorsed damaging cadre deployment policies, and presided over informal funding practices that undermined institutional integrity. In foreign affairs, Mandela's human rights rhetoric was inconsistently applied and his party's fundraising strategies conflicted with proclaimed values. Domestically, he missed opportunities for more decisive action on HIV/AIDS and structural inequality, and normalized problematic uses of informal power and patronage. The article concludes that the four‐dimensional analysis reveals significant shortcomings in Mandela's exercise of presidential power.
Anthony Butler (Thu,) studied this question.