Pathways of the Political
Author: Timothy Sisk
Date: 2008
Size:
25 pages
(326 KB)
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How do election processes contribute to stability after civil war? This book chapter from 'The Dilemmas of Statebuilding' compares statebuilding in Cambodia, South Africa, Afghanistan and Liberia. It argues that electoral processes are necessary in moving beyond violence. However, the way elections are carried out is critical. Sequencing, design and the extent of international oversight are the key variables that determine the extent to which electoral processes contribute to capable, responsive states or to captured, fragmented and weak states.
Most civil wars end in negotiated settlements. An essential part of such treaties is agreement on a defined political pathway through which a transitional process to consolidate peace is to unfold. These transition paths often feature the formation of transitional governments, sometimes constitution-making processes, and an electoral process and an event to give post-war governance a new sense of legitimacy.
Cambodia is an example of how initially problematic elections set up conditions for a weak, captured state. South Africa’s 1994 polls are an example of elections that empowered the state by rearranging the relationship of the state to its society. In Afghanistan, the inclusion of warlords in electoral processes may undermine the ability of the new state to wield monopolistic authority. In Liberia, the choice for a presidential election with a runoff raised concerns about whether the loser in the poll would foment civil war. In fact, a newly empowered state has emerged following voluntary power sharing.
The experience of these countries shows that the political pathway of transition and especially the initial, post-war electoral process matters significantly for statebuilding:
The success of the statebuilding enterprise itself is predicated on several key factors:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Sisk, T., 2008, 'Pathways of the Political', Chapter 9 in The Dilemmas of Statebuilding: Confronting the Contradictions of Postwar Peace Operations, ed. R. Paris and T Sisk, Routledge, New York, pp 196-224.
Author:
Timothy D. Sisk
, timothy.sisk[at]du.edu
Organisation: Routledge, http://www.routledge.com