Außenpolitische Hintergründe des gesellschaftlichen Umbruchs in Guinea-Bissau
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CONTRIBUTORS:
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JOURNAL:
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YEAR:
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2000
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PUB TYPE:
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Journal Article
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SUBJECT(S):
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transition;culture;politics;foreign policy;Guinea-Bissau
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DISCIPLINE:
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Sociology
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HTTP:
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LANGUAGE:
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German
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PUB ID:
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103-418-465
(Last edited on
2005/08/10 09:44:42 GMT-6)
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SPONSOR(S):
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ABSTRACT:
The transition in Guinea-Bissau is often described as an internal affair, triggered off by “bad government”, i. e. decades of corruption, violent repression of opposition, and other human rights violations, which led to increasing conflicts among the power elite of the deposed dictator “Nino” Vieira. This might be a biased view, unduly influenced by fashionable political positions of major donor countries of development assistance, on which any government in Bissau is highly dependent. This article advocates a more balanced problem analysis: Whereas the impact of internal forces on the transition is not denied, it wants to stress that external factors had an equal or even greater impact on the roots of the “civil war” in 1998/99 and subsequent democratisation in Guinea-Bissau. Notably, development in Guinea-Bissau has been hampered by numerous parallel and competing activities of luso-, franco-, and anglophone clientelist networks and their hidden agendas. However, the conflict escalation, provoked last not least by foreign powers, put an end to 25 years of despotic rule of the PAIGC and their rulers, and renewed the hopes for genuine democratisation and good governance which the liberation war of the 1960th failed to deliver.
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