Voting to Peace: How to manage democratic transitions in post-conflict states
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1
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Voting to Peace (2012)
DE PB NW RP
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, in Deutsch, AV Akademikerverlag Mai 2012, Taschenbuch, neu, Nachdruck.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, AHA-BUCH GmbH [51283250], Einbeck, Germany.
This item is printed on demand - Print on Demand Titel. Neuware - Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict. 116 pp. Englisch.
This item is printed on demand - Print on Demand Titel. Neuware - Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict. 116 pp. Englisch.
2
Voting to Peace
DE PB NW
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, in Deutsch, Av Akademikerverlag, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandkostenfrei.
buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG, [1].
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.116 S. 220 mmVersandfertig in 3-5 Tagen, Softcover.
buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG, [1].
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.116 S. 220 mmVersandfertig in 3-5 Tagen, Softcover.
3
Voting to Peace
DE PB NW
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, in Deutsch, Av Akademikerverlag, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandkostenfrei.
buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG, [1].
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.116 S. 220 mmVersandfertig in 3-5 Tagen, Softcover.
buecher.de GmbH & Co. KG, [1].
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.116 S. 220 mmVersandfertig in 3-5 Tagen, Softcover.
4
Voting to Peace
~EN NW AB
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, vermutlich in Englisch, VDM Verlag Dr. Müller, Saarbrücken, Deutschland, neu, Hörbuch.
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Lieferzeit: 5 Tage.
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a mar ket democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politi cians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict.
5
Voting to Peace: How to manage democratic transitions in post-conflict states (2012)
EN PB NW
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, in Englisch, 116 Seiten, AV Akademikerverlag, Taschenbuch, neu.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 24 hours.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a market democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politicians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict. Paperback, Label: AV Akademikerverlag, AV Akademikerverlag, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-04, Studio: AV Akademikerverlag.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Amazon.com.
Revision with unchanged content. Since the end of the Cold War the number of civil wars with following peace- and state-building attempts has significantly increased. In line with the third wave of democratization theory more and more states try to establish a market democracy after the end of domestic conflict. But is a rapid transition with immediate elections really the one best way to end domestic conflict? Recent examples of Afghanistan and Iraq show that elections are by no means an endpoint for domestic conflict within war-torn societies, but rather an accelerator for ethnic violence. Therefore to introduce primarily stable institutions, like rule of law and a functioning bureaucracy, before organizing democratic elections, seems to be a more promising strategy. The author Florian Kunze investigates this hypothesis, first through a quantitative analysis of 35 cases, and second through an in depth analysis of three case studies: Namibia, Liberia, and South Africa. This book addresses researches and students of international relations, politicians, development workers and military staff faced with state building tasks, and all other interested in the issue of democratic transition after domestic conflict. Paperback, Label: AV Akademikerverlag, AV Akademikerverlag, Produktgruppe: Book, Publiziert: 2012-05-04, Studio: AV Akademikerverlag.
6
Symbolbild
Voting to Peace: How to manage democratic transitions in post-conflict states (2012)
DE PB NW RP
ISBN: 9783639405026 bzw. 3639405021, in Deutsch, AV Akademikerverlag, Taschenbuch, neu, Nachdruck.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, English-Book-Service - A Fine Choice [1048135], Waldshut-Tiengen, Germany.
This item is printed on demand for shipment within 3 working days.
This item is printed on demand for shipment within 3 working days.
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