Abstract Departing from the hybridity literature on peacebuilding and electoral studies, this paper treats democratization in Afghanistan as a hybridization process. As a result, to understand the durability of corruption, fragile political parties, and non-democratic practices in the country, one should look more closely at the interplay between the current electoral system and how elites and local people respond to it
Post-9/11 incident the Taliban rule ended in Afghanistan and a democratic government was established...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Afghanistan suffers from an ethnic-based and fragme...
Based on fieldwork in provinces across the country and interviews with more than seven hundred candi...
Electoral systems are the most powerful lever of political engineering for conflict resolution and s...
The introductory article to this volume positions the Afghan case within the broader literature on t...
The 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan entailed combating terrorist cells and democratization of Afghan...
Liberal peacebuilding efforts in fragile states often suffer from low levels of public support for d...
The 2014 Afghan presidential and provincial council elections will have a critical effect on the fut...
Abstract: In accordance with Article 4 of the Bonn Agreement, the presidential election in Afghanist...
It is becoming evident that if and when Afghanistan makes meaningful steps towards democracy, electi...
In Afghanistan, day to a day power struggle, rampant corruption, and numerous challenges increased a...
One of the fundamental functions of any state is to maintain monopoly over legitimate use of violenc...
Afghanistan has the potential to become a democratic system of government, complete with a new const...
The thesis's aim involves explain why the realization of democracy failed in Afghanistan during the ...
The post-Taliban democratic reforms in Afghanistan were in part a recreation of the past. Afghanista...
Post-9/11 incident the Taliban rule ended in Afghanistan and a democratic government was established...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Afghanistan suffers from an ethnic-based and fragme...
Based on fieldwork in provinces across the country and interviews with more than seven hundred candi...
Electoral systems are the most powerful lever of political engineering for conflict resolution and s...
The introductory article to this volume positions the Afghan case within the broader literature on t...
The 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan entailed combating terrorist cells and democratization of Afghan...
Liberal peacebuilding efforts in fragile states often suffer from low levels of public support for d...
The 2014 Afghan presidential and provincial council elections will have a critical effect on the fut...
Abstract: In accordance with Article 4 of the Bonn Agreement, the presidential election in Afghanist...
It is becoming evident that if and when Afghanistan makes meaningful steps towards democracy, electi...
In Afghanistan, day to a day power struggle, rampant corruption, and numerous challenges increased a...
One of the fundamental functions of any state is to maintain monopoly over legitimate use of violenc...
Afghanistan has the potential to become a democratic system of government, complete with a new const...
The thesis's aim involves explain why the realization of democracy failed in Afghanistan during the ...
The post-Taliban democratic reforms in Afghanistan were in part a recreation of the past. Afghanista...
Post-9/11 incident the Taliban rule ended in Afghanistan and a democratic government was established...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Afghanistan suffers from an ethnic-based and fragme...
Based on fieldwork in provinces across the country and interviews with more than seven hundred candi...