Engineering Revolution (e-bog) af Spoerri, Marlene
Spoerri, Marlene (forfatter)

Engineering Revolution e-bog

802,25 DKK (inkl. moms 1002,81 DKK)
The nonviolent overthrow of Balkan dictator Slobodan Miloevi in October 2000 is celebrated as democracy promotion at its best. This perceived political success has been used to justify an industry tasked with &quote;exporting&quote; democracy to countries like Belarus, Ukraine, Tunisia, and Egypt. Yet the true extent of the West's involvement in Miloevi's overthrow remained unclear until now. E...
E-bog 802,25 DKK
Forfattere Spoerri, Marlene (forfatter)
Udgivet 16 september 2014
Længde 256 sider
Genrer International relations
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780812290202
The nonviolent overthrow of Balkan dictator Slobodan Miloevi in October 2000 is celebrated as democracy promotion at its best. This perceived political success has been used to justify an industry tasked with "e;exporting"e; democracy to countries like Belarus, Ukraine, Tunisia, and Egypt. Yet the true extent of the West's involvement in Miloevi's overthrow remained unclear until now. Engineering Revolution uses declassified CIA documents and personal interviews with diplomats, aid providers, and policymakers, as well as thousands of pages of internal NGO documents, to explore what proponents consider one of the greatest successes of the democracy promotion enterprise.Through its in-depth examination of the two decades that preceded and followed Miloevi's unseating, as well as its critical look at foreign assistance targeting Serbia's troubled political party landscape, Engineering Revolution upends the conventional wisdom on the effectiveness of democracy promotion in Serbia. Marlene Spoerri demonstrates that democracy took root in Serbia in spite of, not because of, Western interventionin fact, foreign intervention often hurt rather than helped Serbia's tenuous transition to democracy. As Western governments recalibrate their agendas in the wake of the Arab Spring, this timely book offers important lessons for the democracy promotion community as it sets its sights on the Middle East, former Soviet Union, and beyond.