Intervention and Promotion of Democracy. The Paradoxes of External Democratization and the Power-Sharing Between International Officials and Local Political Leaders

Q3 Social Sciences World Political Science Pub Date : 2013-01-16 DOI:10.1515/wpsr-2013-0006
A. Carati
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Abstract

Abstract Since the end of the Cold War new practices of external interferences in the domestic affairs of states have revealed an unprecedented relationship between international intervention and the promotion of democracy. In fact, the new generation of peace-building missions is oriented toward the democratization of the target country. Moving from the paradoxes brought about by the goal of democratization, the paper offers an explanation of the power-sharing between international officials and local political actors in the target country. On the one hand, a democratic approach to international intervention fosters self-determination, tends to grant sovereignty and independence and considers the international mandate as temporary. On the other hand, the goal of democratization entails the establishment of enduring neo-trusteeships, violating the sovereignty and independence of the target-state. The paper focuses on three case-studies (Bosnia, Kosovo and East Timor) to assess how those paradoxes lead to conflicting attitudes by international officials – who both concede and retain essential powers over local political actors – creating a power-sharing in the target country.
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干预和促进民主。外部民主化的悖论与国际官员与地方政治领袖的权力分享
自冷战结束以来,外部干涉各国内政的新做法揭示了国际干预与促进民主之间前所未有的关系。事实上,新一代的建设和平任务是以目标国家的民主化为目标的。本文从民主化目标所带来的悖论出发,对目标国家的国际官员和当地政治行为者之间的权力分享进行了解释。一方面,对国际干预采取的民主办法促进自决,倾向于给予主权和独立,并认为国际任务是暂时的。另一方面,民主化的目标需要建立持久的新托管关系,侵犯目标国家的主权和独立。本文着重于三个案例研究(波斯尼亚、科索沃和东帝汶),以评估这些矛盾如何导致国际官员的态度冲突——他们既让步又保留了对当地政治行为者的基本权力——从而在目标国家创造了权力分享。
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World Political Science
World Political Science Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
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0.70
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期刊介绍: World Political Science (WPS) publishes translations of prize-winning articles nominated by prominent national political science associations and journals around the world. Scholars in a field as international as political science need to know about important political research produced outside the English-speaking world. Sponsored by the International Political Science Association (IPSA), the premiere global political science organization with membership from national assoications 50 countries worldwide WPS gathers together and translates an ever-increasing number of countries'' best political science articles, bridging the language barriers that have made this cutting-edge research inaccessible up to now. Articles in the World Political Science cover a wide range of subjects of interest to readers concerned with the systematic analysis of political issues facing national, sub-national and international governments and societies. Fields include Comparative Politics, International Relations, Political Sociology, Political Theory, Political Economy, and Public Administration and Policy. Anyone interested in the central issues of the day, whether they are students, policy makers, or other citizens, will benefit from greater familiarity with debates about the nature and solutions to social, economic and political problems carried on in non-English language forums.
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