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ID103132
Title ProperAid and transition from a war economy to an oligarchy in post-war Tajikistan
LanguageENG
AuthorNakaya, Sumie
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Exclusion and violence persist in post-conflict states, despite international assistance aimed at the demilitarization of politics. Through a field-based study of Tajikistan, this paper argues that aid focuses on economic liberalization, not the implementation of peace agreements, in the initial stage of post-war transition. Such an organization of aid empowers a particular group of elites who have privileged access to state assets at the time of civil war settlement, allowing them to establish institutional frameworks that will consolidate their personal and monopolistic control of resources. This leads to the collapse of power-sharing arrangements, as the incumbent regime seeks to remove wartime commanders and opposition leaders from the administrative apparatus. In Tajikistan, the incumbent regime has also prosecuted many of these former allies and opponents on account of corruption through state agencies established with donor assistance. Aid thus institutionalized exclusion and sustains patterns of violence along civil war divisions, rather than transforming wartime power structures.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asian Survey Vol. 28, No. 3; Sep 2009: p.259 - 273
Journal SourceCentral Asian Survey Vol. 28, No. 3; Sep 2009: p.259 - 273
Key WordsTajikistan ;  Peace - Building ;  Aid ;  Post - War Exclusion and Violence


 
 
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