Post-Conflict Tajikistan: The politics of peacebuilding and the emergence of legitimate orderRoutledge, 07/05/2009 - 240 páginas Post-Soviet, post-conflict Tajikistan is an under-studied and poorly understood case in conflict studies literature. Since 2000, this Central Asian state has seen major political violence end, countrywide order emerge and the peace agreement between the parties of the 1990s civil war hold. Superficially, Tajikistan appears to be a case of successful international intervention for liberal peacebuilding, yet the Tajik peace is characterised by authoritarian governance. Via discourse analysis and extensive fieldwork, including participant-observation with international organizations, the author examines how peacebuilding is understood and practised. The book challenges received wisdom that peacebuilding is a process of democratisation or institutionalisation, showing how interventions have inadvertently served to facilitate an increasingly authoritarian peace and fostered popular accommodation and avoidance strategies. Chapters investigate assistance to political parties and elections, the security sector and community development, and illustrate how transformative aims are thwarted whilst ‘success’ is simulated for an audience of international donors. At the same time the book charts the emergence of a legitimate order with properties of authority, sovereignty and livelihoods. Providing a challenge to the theoretical literature on peacebuilding and concentrating on an under-studied Central Asian state, this book will be of interest to academics working on Peace Studies, International Relations and Central Asian Studies. |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 37
... authoritarian governance. Via discourse analysis and extensive fieldwork, including participant observation with international organisations, the author examines how peacebuilding is understood and practised in Tajikistan. The book ...
... peacebuilding refuses to abide by this peril / promise dichotomy as its peace has proved durable while its government has become increasingly authoritarian . It remains a case which is not explained by the literature.
... authoritarian. Others have suggested that warlord politics continues to characterise Tajikistan (Dadmehr 2003 ... authoritarianism, emphasising the role of Russia and regional powers (Jonson 2006), or failures in international ...
... authoritarian rule and something different in the Central Asian context. An authoritarian regime must establish its legitimacy, or acceptance of the right to rule, among those on whom it depends to retain its position (usually key ...
... authoritarianism of many of Scott's examples , nevertheless exhibits many of the features of high - modernism . The public - hidden duality has two important ramifications for the study of peacebuilding processes . First , Scott's ...
Índice
Secção 20_ | |
Secção 21_ | |
Secção 22_ | |
Secção 23_ | |
Secção 24_ | |
Secção 25_ | |
Secção 26_ | |
Secção 27_ | |
Secção 9_ | |
Secção 10_ | |
Secção 11_ | |
Secção 12_ | |
Secção 13_ | |
Secção 14_ | |
Secção 15_ | |
Secção 16_ | |
Secção 17_ | |
Secção 18_ | |
Secção 19_ | |
Secção 28_ | |
Secção 29_ | |
Secção 30_ | |
Secção 31_ | |
Secção 32_ | |
Secção 33_ | |
Secção 34_ | |
Secção 35_ | |
Secção 36_ | |
Secção 37_ | |
Secção 38_ | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Post-Conflict Tajikistan: The Politics of Peacebuilding and the Emergence of ... John Heathershaw Pré-visualização limitada - 2009 |
Post-conflict Tajikistan: The Politics of Peacebuilding and the Emergence of ... John Heathershaw Pré-visualização indisponível - 2009 |
Post-Conflict Tajikistan: The Politics of Peacebuilding and the Emergence of ... John Heathershaw Pré-visualização indisponível - 2011 |