The consequences of international peacekeeping operations on the domestic politics of a contributing country are an under-explored phenomenon. For Fiji, the intended outcome was that the fledgling state would play a positive role in international affairs. The unintended outcome was the development of a patron-client nexus between the ruling elite and the largely ethnic Fijian military. In the last twenty five years the military has intervened in domestic affairs, which has made Fiji a coup-prone state. This article considers why this has occurred
Fiji has been buffeted by three waves of external influences that profoundly reconfigured its demogr...
In early December 2006, the Fijian military seized power in a coup led by the Armed Forces commander...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Of all the island states of the Southwest Pacific, Fiji's foreign relations have been the most fraug...
Between 1987 and 2006 Fiji experienced four coups in which Governments were overthrown by their mili...
It is in the nature of any civil conflict for the protagonists to be more concerned with their inte...
The role of the Fiji military in politics characterized by the 1987, 2000 and 2006 coups has been in...
This thesis looks at the causes behind Fiji’s 5 December 2006 coup. It takes a twofold approach, fir...
The emergence of China as a dominant force in international politics has challenged the traditional ...
In the 40 years since Fiji became independent, there has been no shortage of perspectives from which...
As diversity is the strength for economic growth quality domestic institutions and good governance a...
Since attaining independence from Britain in 1970, Fiji enjoyed a period of ‘multiracial peace’ for ...
The Fiji military coups of 1987 are about a Fijian chiefly elite and their supporters who were too r...
The present regime in Fiji can be understood, in part, as the ‘will to power’ of a military strength...
The international democracy promotion which began in the 1980s continues to grow at an unprecedented...
Fiji has been buffeted by three waves of external influences that profoundly reconfigured its demogr...
In early December 2006, the Fijian military seized power in a coup led by the Armed Forces commander...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...
Of all the island states of the Southwest Pacific, Fiji's foreign relations have been the most fraug...
Between 1987 and 2006 Fiji experienced four coups in which Governments were overthrown by their mili...
It is in the nature of any civil conflict for the protagonists to be more concerned with their inte...
The role of the Fiji military in politics characterized by the 1987, 2000 and 2006 coups has been in...
This thesis looks at the causes behind Fiji’s 5 December 2006 coup. It takes a twofold approach, fir...
The emergence of China as a dominant force in international politics has challenged the traditional ...
In the 40 years since Fiji became independent, there has been no shortage of perspectives from which...
As diversity is the strength for economic growth quality domestic institutions and good governance a...
Since attaining independence from Britain in 1970, Fiji enjoyed a period of ‘multiracial peace’ for ...
The Fiji military coups of 1987 are about a Fijian chiefly elite and their supporters who were too r...
The present regime in Fiji can be understood, in part, as the ‘will to power’ of a military strength...
The international democracy promotion which began in the 1980s continues to grow at an unprecedented...
Fiji has been buffeted by three waves of external influences that profoundly reconfigured its demogr...
In early December 2006, the Fijian military seized power in a coup led by the Armed Forces commander...
Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democrati...