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Africa Social Work and Development Network | Mtandao waKazi zaJamii naMaendeleo waAfrica
Africa Social Work & Development Network | Mtandao waKazi zaJamii naMaendeleo waAfrika

Africa Social Work & Development Network | Mtandao waKazi zaJamii naMaendeleo waAfrika

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YOU ARE HERE » Home » Admin ASWDNet » We want lights, not power: The Gen Z uprising in Madagascar and implications for radical social development
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We want lights, not power: The Gen Z uprising in Madagascar and implications for radical social development

Posted on 15 October 202515 October 2025 By aswnetadmin No Comments on We want lights, not power: The Gen Z uprising in Madagascar and implications for radical social development

We want better government, not empty promises.
We want lights, not power.
We want water, not soda.

A generation in the dark

In Madagascar, the chant We don’t want power, we want lights became the anthem of a youth uprising. Young people filled the streets demanding better government and job opportunities. What began as anger over basic services grew into a nationwide movement that forced President Andry Rajoelina from power. Many protesters said they no longer trusted his leadership, especially after reports confirmed that he held French citizenship, deepening suspicions of foreign influence. The movement, driven by the Gen Z Mada network, used social media, music, and street organizing to demand an end to corruption and neglect.

The protests began on September 25, 2025, when two opposition politicians who criticized the government over electricity cuts were arrested. That act ignited anger among a generation living through daily blackouts and water shortages. Protesters called out chronic service failures, limited access to higher education, corruption, and deepening poverty. Carrying empty yellow jerrycans as symbols of broken promises, students and workers demanded water that flows, lights that shine, and leadership that serves its citizens. Their symbol, a modified One Piece pirate flag with a Malagasy straw hat, captured a creative spirit that united young people across the country.

A history of unfinished revolutions

Since gaining independence from France in 1960, Madagascar has faced repeated cycles of uprising and political transition. In 1972, students and workers overthrew President Philibert Tsiranana’s pro-French regime to reclaim national sovereignty. In 1991, civil servants and protesters again pushed a president to resign, but elite interests soon returned to power. Entrepreneur Marc Ravalomanana came to office in 2002 promising reform and modernization, yet he was ousted in 2009 by a young mayor, Andry Rajoelina, who now faces the same fate at the hands of an even younger generation seeking true independence and the end of lingering colonial ties.

The roots of unrest

Madagascar’s recent upheaval reflects years of deepening socioeconomic strain:

IndicatorSituation / Statistic
Access to electricityOnly 36% nationally, just 7–12% in rural areas; cities face 6–12 hour daily blackouts
Water access70% of southern residents lack basic drinking water; frequent multi-day shortages
Utility crisisJirama’s debt is 2.37 trillion MGA (~$529M), or 7.6% of GDP; aging infrastructure causes 20% water losses and declining hydro output
Poverty75–80% of Malagasy live below $2.15/day; poverty in secondary cities rose from 46% to 61% in the past decade
Youth unemploymentOver 30% in urban areas
Inflation7–8%, eroding already low wages
Urbanization vs. GDP4.2% annual urban growth, but GDP per capita remains only $453
CorruptionRanked 140th of 180 countries

These social and economic conditions shaped the frustration that erupted into mass protest and political change.

Implications for radical social work and development

Radical social work or development is an approach that goes beyond helping individuals cope with personal hardships. It challenges the political, economic, and social systems that create and sustain inequality. Instead of viewing poverty or exclusion as personal misfortune, radical social work sees them as consequences of structural injustice. Its goal is to transform those systems through empowerment, collective action, and solidarity. At its heart, radical social work is guided by the belief that social work is not just about care but also about change. It is rooted in principles of freedom, justice, and human dignity, drawing inspiration from the African philosophy of Ubuntu, the idea that I am because we are. (Not I am because you are). Ubuntu emphasizes interconnectedness, compassion, and shared humanity, making it a natural ethical foundation for radical social practice. It calls on social workers to promote justice not only for individuals but for entire communities, ensuring that development respects both people and their collective well-being. In practice, radical social workers engage directly with communities, helping them identify sources of oppression and organize for social transformation. They work with people, not for them, encouraging awareness and agency rather than dependency. Whether confronting corruption, inequality, or exploitation, their focus is on systemic change that restores human dignity and builds solidarity among the marginalized.

The difference between mainstream and radical approaches are:

AspectMainstream Social Work and DevelopmentRadical Social Work and Development
FocusAddresses individual problems and needsChallenges structural causes of injustice
RoleHelper or service providerActivist and ally for social change
GoalAdaptation and copingLiberation, empowerment, and justice
Ethical basisProfessional neutralityUbuntu values of freedom, justice, and collective care
Approach Often neutral or apolitical Explicitly political and transformative

Applying Ubuntu lens:

LevelFocus of Radical Action (Ubuntu Lens)Example of Practice
FamilyBuilding justice-conscious families and nurturing freedom-minded citizensFamily dialogue on rights, justice, and civic duty; intergenerational mentorship
CommunityPromoting resource justice and collective actionCommunity assemblies, cooperatives, participatory planning, land and water advocacy
SocialChallenging structural inequality and corruptionAdvocacy, civic education, policy reform
EnvironmentalAdvancing ecological justice and sustainabilityEco-social work, water rights campaigns, community reforestation

The uprising shows how unmet basic needs and persistent inequality can lead to collective resistance. For social workers and development practitioners, Madagascar’s movement demonstrates the power and limits of radical action. The loss of more than twenty lives and the violent confrontations between protesters and security forces reveal the deep cost of systemic neglect, tragedies that could have been avoided through responsive governance and genuine social investment. Radical social work must therefore address both the causes of such uprisings and the means to prevent violence.

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