When hybridity breeds contempt: negative hybrid peace in Cambodia |
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Authors: | Youcef Bouandel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centre for Policy Research, United Nations University, Tokyo, Japansimangan@unu.edu |
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Abstract: | Algeria's third plural presidential election caught the imagination of the Algerian electorate like no one has done before. Previously, the results were known in advance and elections served only to confer legitimacy on decisions made elsewhere, invariably by the military. This 2004 election seems to be more open. At least in theory, for the first time in Algeria's history, the winner of this election is not going to be the explicit choice of the military. In addition to the neutrality of the army, the autonomy of the former ruling party, the FLN and the unprecedented criticism of the President, the ingredients for an open and exciting election were in place. While most candidates engaged in negative campaigning, sometimes even at the expense of their political manifestos, the incumbent president stressed his achievements, particularly on the security front. ‘National reconciliation’, the way towards the establishment of further peace, dominated his political campaign and turned the election to a referendum on stability. |
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Keywords: | Cambodia peacebuilding hybrid peace negative hybrid peace local turn |
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