Bringing together contributions from political scholars from Nigeria, the United States, and Europe, Okafor (African American studies, Eastern Michigan U.) presents a collection that focus on the problems of the state, federal, and presidential elections in Nigeria in April, 2007 and their implications for democratic development in Nigeria and in Africa as a whole. Although the elections led to the peaceful hand-over of power from Olusegun Obasanjo to Alhaji Musa Yar'Adua, many critics, including internal and international poll observers, charged that the elections could not really be considered free and fair. The volume's 11 chapters summarize Nigeria's political evolution; place the 2007 election controversy in historical and international context; discuss the injection of commercialization into electoral politics; examine patronage politics and the elections in the Nigerian state of Anambra; explore the prospects of electronic voting for Nigerian elections; criticize the role of geographical zoning in the allocation of political and bureaucratic offices; place the 2007 elections in the context of general African political trends; compare the extrinsic factors impeding democratic development in Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya; and draw lessons for democracy and development in Africa from the experiences of the African diaspora in the Americas.'