As Sudan’s military rulers and the pro-democracy coalition of Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC) resume their fraught negotiations over the composition of a civilian government, real power is being transacted according to a different logic—the political marketplace
This paper addresses the challenge of security sector reform (SSR) in democratizing Sudan. The forme...
This article tries to go beyond the general features of the Sudanese three popular Uprisings of 1964...
Southern Sudan’s historic referendum on whether to stay in or secede from a united Sudan is rapidly ...
This paper examines the continuities and changes in Sudan’s political economy and political marketpl...
This paper provides a succinct analysis of Sudan as a political marketplace. It assumes a working kn...
Creating a peaceful political order in South Sudan often seems like trying to cage a torrent: howeve...
While there has been much discussion of political violence in Sudan’s peripheries, less attention ha...
South Sudan obtained independence in July 2011 as a kleptocracy – a militarized, corrupt neo-patrimo...
There seems to be no end to the good news coming from the Horn of Africa. First, the Nobel peace pri...
This blog was taken from Dr. Willow’s panel contribution at the Prospects for Democracy in Sudan eve...
As the violent civil war in South Sudan comes to a formal end, peace is made by power-sharing betwee...
The paper analyses the emergence of the National Congress Party (N.C.P.) within the context of the r...
Last April, Sudanese people have been called to the polls for the 2015 general elections. It represe...
Sudan currently consists of two major political groups under a single government. The signing of the...
Democracy means sorting out problems together, not going ones own way in a separate state every tim...
This paper addresses the challenge of security sector reform (SSR) in democratizing Sudan. The forme...
This article tries to go beyond the general features of the Sudanese three popular Uprisings of 1964...
Southern Sudan’s historic referendum on whether to stay in or secede from a united Sudan is rapidly ...
This paper examines the continuities and changes in Sudan’s political economy and political marketpl...
This paper provides a succinct analysis of Sudan as a political marketplace. It assumes a working kn...
Creating a peaceful political order in South Sudan often seems like trying to cage a torrent: howeve...
While there has been much discussion of political violence in Sudan’s peripheries, less attention ha...
South Sudan obtained independence in July 2011 as a kleptocracy – a militarized, corrupt neo-patrimo...
There seems to be no end to the good news coming from the Horn of Africa. First, the Nobel peace pri...
This blog was taken from Dr. Willow’s panel contribution at the Prospects for Democracy in Sudan eve...
As the violent civil war in South Sudan comes to a formal end, peace is made by power-sharing betwee...
The paper analyses the emergence of the National Congress Party (N.C.P.) within the context of the r...
Last April, Sudanese people have been called to the polls for the 2015 general elections. It represe...
Sudan currently consists of two major political groups under a single government. The signing of the...
Democracy means sorting out problems together, not going ones own way in a separate state every tim...
This paper addresses the challenge of security sector reform (SSR) in democratizing Sudan. The forme...
This article tries to go beyond the general features of the Sudanese three popular Uprisings of 1964...
Southern Sudan’s historic referendum on whether to stay in or secede from a united Sudan is rapidly ...