Description

Book Synopsis
Based on fieldwork in provinces across the country and interviews with more than seven hundred candidates, officials, community leaders, and voters, this book builds an in-depth portrait of Afghanistan’s recent elections as experienced by individuals and communities.

Trade Review
A fascinating look into how Afghan politics trump Western political theory, Derailing Democracy is readable yet filled with insight. The book is a serious critique of international democracy practice and funding that needs attention well beyond those interested in Afghanistan. It highlights the consequences of letting donor expediency sideline cultural understanding, including the multifaceted role of violence. -- Ronald Neumann, United States Ambassador to Afghanistan, 2005-2007 More snake oil than panacea, the promise of elections in Afghanistan has failed to create a representative government-and worse-has displaced other tested traditions of consensus building that Afghans have long relied upon. Derailing Democracy explains why this is the case, but the lessons it draws have much wider applicability well beyond Afghanistan. -- Thomas Barfield, author of Afghanistan: A Political and Cultural History Noah Coburn and Anna Larson refuse to describe the democratization process in Afghanistan in the simplistic terms of the success or failure of elections, but instead describe how the introduction of elections by the international community altered and reshaped Afghan power dynamics, paradoxically creating a less democratic politics and a more corrupt elite. -- Scott Seward Smith, director of Afghanistan and Central Asia Programs, United States Institute of World Peace, and author of Afghanistan's Troubled Transition: Politics, Peacekeeping, and the 2004 Presidential Election

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations 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

Derailing Democracy in Afghanistan

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    A Hardback by Noah Coburn, Anna Larson

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 24/12/2013
      ISBN13: 9780231166201, 978-0231166201
      ISBN10: 0231166206

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Based on fieldwork in provinces across the country and interviews with more than seven hundred candidates, officials, community leaders, and voters, this book builds an in-depth portrait of Afghanistan’s recent elections as experienced by individuals and communities.

      Trade Review
      A fascinating look into how Afghan politics trump Western political theory, Derailing Democracy is readable yet filled with insight. The book is a serious critique of international democracy practice and funding that needs attention well beyond those interested in Afghanistan. It highlights the consequences of letting donor expediency sideline cultural understanding, including the multifaceted role of violence. -- Ronald Neumann, United States Ambassador to Afghanistan, 2005-2007 More snake oil than panacea, the promise of elections in Afghanistan has failed to create a representative government-and worse-has displaced other tested traditions of consensus building that Afghans have long relied upon. Derailing Democracy explains why this is the case, but the lessons it draws have much wider applicability well beyond Afghanistan. -- Thomas Barfield, author of Afghanistan: A Political and Cultural History Noah Coburn and Anna Larson refuse to describe the democratization process in Afghanistan in the simplistic terms of the success or failure of elections, but instead describe how the introduction of elections by the international community altered and reshaped Afghan power dynamics, paradoxically creating a less democratic politics and a more corrupt elite. -- Scott Seward Smith, director of Afghanistan and Central Asia Programs, United States Institute of World Peace, and author of Afghanistan's Troubled Transition: Politics, Peacekeeping, and the 2004 Presidential Election

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations 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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