Political settlements in divided soc...
Cyprus

 

  • Political settlements in divided societies[electronic resource] :consocialism and Cyprus /
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
    杜威分類號: 956.9304
    書名/作者: Political settlements in divided societies : consocialism and Cyprus // Christalla Yakinthou.
    作者: Yakinthou, Christalla,
    出版者: New York : : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2009.
    面頁冊數: 1 online resource.
    標題: Conflict management - Cyprus.
    標題: Cyprus - History - Cyprus Crisis, 1963.
    ISBN: 9780230246874
    ISBN: 0230246877
    書目註: Includes bibliographical references and index.
    內容註: Chronology of key events in Cyprus -- Chronology of the Annan Plan -- 1. Consociationalism intheory and practice -- 2. Cypriot history(ies) as the foundation of modern reunification politics -- 3. The first consociational state : why did it fail? -- 4. Getting the institutions right : makingplans for Cyprus -- 5. How close were they, really? : elite support of a power-sharing solution -- 6. UN and EU : offering incentives for resolution -- 7. The politics of adopting consociationalism :the referendums of 2004.
    摘要、提要註: The problem of how political settlements are to be adopted in divided or post-conflict societies is one which is receiving growing attention, as the international community increasingly views protracted intra-state conflicts as carrying trans-national consequences. It is not only finding the most appropriate kind of political settlement that is so problematic, but also how to reach the point where those proposals are adopted. Cyprus provides an illuminating case-study of these problems. The object of many years of scrutiny and multiple, sustained efforts at resolution of its division means that Cyprus can reveal a good deal about what impedes and what assists progress towards a settlement. The experiences of Cyprus, therefore, can offer lessons to both practitioners working on political solutions for divided and post-conflict societies, and to academics and others seeking to understand how conflicts become intractable, where the primary impediments lie to successful constitutional architecture, and how those impediments can be overcome. The book offers answers for why political leaders in Cyprus have been so unwilling to adopt a power-sharing solution. In so doing, it offersnew material for the wider debate regarding constitutional design and adoption ofpeace plans in divided societies; on the politics of institutionalising peace.
    電子資源: access to fulltext (Palgrave)
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