Afghanistan's troubled transition : politics, peacekeeping, and the 2004 presidential election / Scott Seward Smith.
Material type: TextPublication details: Boulder, Colo. : FirstForumPress, 2011.Description: 1 online resource (x, 310 pages)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781588269355
- 1588269353
- 9781935049630
- 1935049631
- Elections -- Afghanistan
- Presidents -- Afghanistan -- Election -- 2004
- Democratization -- Afghanistan
- Afghanistan -- Politics and government -- 2001-
- Élections -- Afghānistān
- Démocratisation -- Afghānistān
- Afghānistān -- Politique et gouvernement -- 2001-
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Process -- Elections
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Process -- General
- Democratization
- Elections
- Politics and government
- Presidents -- Election
- Afghanistan
- Élections -- Afghanistan -- 1990-
- Afghanistan -- Politique et gouvernement -- 2001-
- Since 2001
- 324.9581/047 22
- JQ1769.A5 S65 2011eb
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- The Bonn agreement -- Signposts of democracy: the emergency Loya Jirga -- Plans and personalities -- Budgets and donors -- Security and the Baghdad effect -- Drafting the constitution -- Resetting the electoral clock -- Voter registration: turning victims into citizens -- Democracy and the Durand line -- Drafting the electoral law -- Applying the law -- Countdown to election day -- Polling and counting -- The 2005 parliamentary elections -- Reckonings: the 2009 presidential elections -- Logistics, politics, and transitions.
Scott Seward Smith focuses on Afghanistan¿s 2004 presidential election¿the first popular election ever held there¿as he explores the painstaking attempt by the United Nations to develop democratic institutions in the country. Smith thoroughly describes the personalities, policies, bureaucracies, and external factors that shaped the faltering transition process from 2001 through 2009. He also points to the missed opportunities that contributed to the flawed elections of 2009. Arguing that the failure to give sufficient weight to the importance of institution building led to the crisis of confidence and the resurgence of warlord politics that we see today, he sheds light not only on what has gone wrong in Afghanistan, but also on the prospects for Afghan democracy.
Print version record.
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