This paper develops the concept of post-patronage Africa as a structural transformation in the relationship between African states and external actors. It argues that the erosion of traditional patron–client systems has produced a new operating environment in which no external actor can guarantee regime survival or impose durable political alignment. The paper introduces two core mechanisms — the “agency test” and the “stabilizer’s trap” — to explain how external engagement is filtered, utilized, and ultimately limited. External actors are not expelled but constrained, fragmented, and rendered structurally replaceable. Drawing on cases including the Central African Republic, Mali, and Nigeria, the analysis shows that contemporary African political order is increasingly organized through transactional, function-based arrangements rather than hierarchical dependency. Russia’s presence is interpreted not as strategic expansion, but as alignment with this structural environment. The result is not a new hierarchy of influence, but a system of coexistence in which sovereignty is more operational but also more unstable, and no external actor exercises durable control.
Sergey Eledinov (Fri,) studied this question.