Promoting democratic institutions in post-conflict societies: Giving diversity a chance
The idea of building or strengthening 'democratic institutions' to facilitate the reconstruction of a country after conflict, within a framework of stability and legitimacy, has attracted increasing attention. This article highlights the principal ambiguities attached to the modes in which...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International peacekeeping (London, England) England), 2000-10, Vol.7 (3), p.17-35 |
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description | The idea of building or strengthening 'democratic institutions' to facilitate the reconstruction of a country after conflict, within a framework of stability and legitimacy, has attracted increasing attention. This article highlights the principal ambiguities attached to the modes in which democracy is most often promoted in such a perspective, particularly in their failure to articulate the various transformations that shape the societies concerned. It is at this very level that the identification of the 'institutions' to benefit from specific support becomes crucial. The article calls for a better awareness of the routines and complexities of the processes shaping institutions, in the fluid conjoining of the social and political spheres. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/13533310008413847 |
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source | Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library |
subjects | Conflict resolution Democracy Humanitarian intervention Institutions Legitimacy Military intervention Peace keeping Peace studies Political Development Reconstruction Stability United Nations |
title | Promoting democratic institutions in post-conflict societies: Giving diversity a chance |
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