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COMPREHENSIVE PEACE AGREEMENT (CPA) (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   122765


Making unity unattractive: the conflicting aims of Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement / Aalen, Lovise   Journal Article
Aalen, Lovise Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract As pointed out by Roeder and Rothchild (P. G. Roeder and D. Rothchild (eds), Sustainable Peace: Power and Democracy after Civil Wars (New York: Cornell University Press 2005)), a crucial dilemma in post-war power-sharing arrangements is that the very same institutions that provide an attractive basis for ending a conflict are likely to hinder the consolidation of peace and democracy in the long term. The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was the major reason for ending Sudan's North-South civil war - for 'winning the war' - but did also create the conditions for 'losing the peace'? This article looks at the power-sharing arrangements of the CPA and its impact on the conditions from peace and democracy in Sudan in the interim period prior to the referendum on southern independence. Through analyses of its formal institutional frames, its implementation, and the major stakeholders' perceptions, it becomes clear that the power sharing did not 'make unity attractive', as initially anticipated, but was in fact one of the factors contributing to the separation of Sudan in 2011.
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2
ID:   112355


Political and constitutional transformation in Nepal: challenges and opportunities / Kumar, Chanchal   Journal Article
Kumar, Chanchal Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   122761


Sudan and the not so comprehensive peace / Curless, Gareth; Rodt, Annemarie Peen   Journal Article
Rodt, Annemarie Peen Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This special section examines the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) between the Government of the Republic of the Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army. It focuses on why the agreement was possible, the challenges involved in reaching and implementing it, and the issues that now lay ahead for both North and South Sudan. The purpose of this undertaking is to tease out what lessons might be learnt from this case for the future study and practice of seeking to settle civil wars through agreement and implementation of conflict settlements. This introductory article first provides a brief summary of the Sudanese civil war; it then examines the CPA's power and wealth-sharing arrangements and their implementation to date; and finally concludes with an analysis of statebuilding in the recently independent South Sudan.
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