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Cambodia Votes : Democracy, Authority and International Support for Elections 1993–2013, Hardback Book

Cambodia Votes : Democracy, Authority and International Support for Elections 1993–2013 Hardback

Part of the Governance in Asia series

Hardback

Description

This detailed study charts the evolution of internationally assisted elections in Cambodia beginning in 1993 with the vote supervised by the United Nations Transitional Authority (UNTAC).

Although the UNTAC operation was unprecedented in its size and political scope, the less-than-democratic outcome of the 1993 vote (with Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party losing but remaining in power) began two decades of internationally assisted elections manipulated and controlled by Hun Sen and the CPP. Since then, disparate international actors have been complicit in supporting ‘authoritarian elections’ while promoting a more democratic and transparent electoral process.

This has produced a relatively stable political-economic system serving the interests of a powerful and wealthy ruling elite but at the expense of overall positive socio-economic and political change.

It has also allowed opposition forces to co-exist alongside a repressive state and to compete in elections that still hold out the possibility for change.

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