Book Details

Derailing Democracy in Afghanistan : Elections in an Unstable Political Landscape
Merging political science with anthropology, Noah Coburn and Anna Larson document how political leaders, commanders, and the new ruling elite have used elections to further their own interests and deprive local communities of access to political opportunities. They retrace presidential, parliamentary, and provincial council elections over the past decade and expose the role of international actors in promoting the polls as one-off events, detached from the broader political landscape. This approach to elections has allowed existing local powerholders to solidify their grip on resources and opportunities, derailing democratization processes and entrenching a deeper disengagement from central government. Western powers, Coburn and Larson argue, need to reevaluate their most basic assumptions about elections, democracy, and international intervention if they hope to prevent similar outcomes in the future.
List of Abbreviations
Chronology: Timeline of Elections and Other Major Historical Events in Afghanistan
Democracy Derailed?
Map of Afghanistan
1. Understanding Elections in Afghanistan
2. Of Ballots and Boundaries: A Brief History of Political Participation in Afghanistan
3. Electing the Peace? Afghanistan's Fast-Track Democracy
4. A House of Sand: The Fallout of the 2005 Parliamentary Election
5. Engineering Elections Locally
6. The Unintended Consequences of International Support
7. Violence and Voting
8. "They Make Their Ablutions with Bottled Water": Elites and the Decline of Accountability
9. International Intervention and Aspirations of Representative Governance
Notes
References
Index

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