948 resultados para Nation-building -- Ivory Coast
Resumo:
Aquesta relatoria correspon al seminari internacional “Conditions pour la consolidation de la Paix en Côte d’Ivoire” coorganitzat per l’Institut Català Internacional per la Pau, el Centre de Recherche et Action pour la Paix (CERAP), l’Université de Bouaké, i la missió del PNUD a Costa d’Ivori, que es va realitzar a Abidjan entre el 27 i el 29 de setembre de 2010. La situació al país en el moment de la realització del seminari era difícil davant la celebració d’eleccions presidencials pocs mesos després. A la relatoria es recullen diferents aspectes sociopolítics que indicaven les greus fractures a les que s’enfrontava el país, així s’analitzen les qüestions relatives a la propietat de la terra, els problemes relacionats amb la nacionalitat i ciutadania ivoriana, les possibilitats de reorganització de l’estat i la situació del jovent, majoritari a la població ivoriana. Malauradament, les dificultats prèvies a les eleccions és van agreujar amb un resultat ajustat i la proclamació dels dos candidats com a guanyadors. Aquest desafortunat escenari ha fet encara més valuosa la present relatoria.
Resumo:
Aquesta relatoria correspon al seminari internacional “Conditions pour la consolidation de la Paix en Côte d’Ivoire” coorganitzat per l’Institut Català Internacional per la Pau, el Centre de Recherche et Action pour la Paix (CERAP), l’Université de Bouaké, i la missió del PNUD a Costa d’Ivori, que es va realitzar a Abidjan entre el 27 i el 29 de setembre de 2010. La situació al país en el moment de la realització del seminari era difícil davant la celebració d’eleccions presidencials pocs mesos després. A la relatoria es recullen diferents aspectes sociopolítics que indicaven les greus fractures a les que s’enfrontava el país, així s’analitzen les qüestions relatives a la propietat de la terra, els problemes relacionats amb la nacionalitat i ciutadania ivoriana, les possibilitats de reorganització de l’estat i la situació del jovent, majoritari a la població ivoriana. Malauradament, les dificultats prèvies a les eleccions és van agreujar amb un resultat ajustat i la proclamació dels dos candidats com a guanyadors. Aquest desafortunat escenari ha fet encara més valuosa la present relatoria.
Resumo:
In 2002 in the Ivory Coast three months of armed conflict ended with the division of the country. Two regions were separated by an interposition line controlled by the French Forces Licorne. This significant peace process was maintained over time, but characterized for lack of mutual confidence and political immobility, which led to an impasse and the continuation of Laurent Gbagbo in the presidency. Moreover, the peace building process was less successful because the different political agreements failed to address some of the main national problems, such as land property and identity issues. The following paper aims first to analyze the main facts and causes that instigated the conflict since the coup d’état in 2002. Secondly, the paper will analyze the peace process and point out the key elements of the Ouagadougou Peace Agreement (2007): the creation of a new and unique armed forces structure, as well as the identification of the population and implementation of an electoral process. The main goal is to provide the International Catalan Institute for Peace (ICIP) a working tool in order to send an electoral observation mission to this African country by November 2009.
Resumo:
The K5 Plan for the defence of the Cambodian-Thai border was the response of the People's Republic of Kampuchea and its Vietnamese mentors to the threat posed by the resistance forces, particularly the Khmer Rouge, to its efforts to rebuild the nation and consolidate its administration. The very real defence gains, however, were made at the cost of bitter popular resentment over the way those gains were made.
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v.51:no.7(1967)
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Multi-national societies present a complex setting for the politics of immigration, as migration’s linguistic, economic and cultural effects may coincide with existing contestation over nationhood between sub-units and the central state. Empirically, though, political actors only sometimes, and in some places, explicitly connect the politics of immigration to the stakes of multi-level politics. With reference to Canada, Belgium and the United Kingdom, this paper examines the conditions under which political leaders link immigration to ongoing debate about governance in multi-national societies. The paper argues that the distribution of policy competencies in the multi-level system is less important for shaping immigration and integration politics than is the perceived impact (positive or negative) on the sub-unit’s societal culture or its power relationship with the center. Immigration and integration are more often politicized where center and sub-unit hold divergent views on migration and its place in national identity.
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This paper analyzes Spanish infrastructure policy since the early 1700s: Road building in the eighteenth century, railway creation and expansion in the nineteenth, motorway expansion in the twentieth, and high speed rail development in the twenty-first. The analysis reveals a long-term pattern, in which infrastructure policy in Spain has been driven not by the requirements of commerce and economic activity, but rather by the desire to centralize transportation around the country’s political capital.
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Manpower is a basic resource. It is the indispensable means of converting other resources to mankind '.s use and benefit. As a process· of increasing the knowledge, skills, and dexterity of the people of a society, manpower development is the most fundamental means of enabling a nation to acquire the capacities to bring about its desired future state of affairs -- a more mighty and wealthier nation. Singapore's brief nation-building history justifies the emphasis accorded to the importance of good quality human resources and manpower development in economic and socio-political developments. As a tiny island-state with a poor natural resource base, Singapore's long-term survival and development depend ultimately upon the quality and the creative energy of her people. In line with the nation-building goals and strategies of the Republic, as conditioned by her objective setting, Singapore's basic manpower development premise has been one of "quality and not quantity". While implementing the "stop-at-two" family planning and population control programs and the relevant immigration measures to guard against the prospect of a "population explosion", the Government has energetically fostered various educational programs, including vocational training schemes, adult education programs, the youth movement, and the national service scheme to improve the quality of Singaporeans. There is no denying that some of the manpower development measures taken by the Government have imposed sacrifice and hardship on the Singapore citizens. Nevertheless, they are the basic conditions for the island-Republic's long-term survival and development. It is essential iii to note that Singapore's continuing existence and phenomenal-success are largely attributable to the will, capacities and efforts of her leaders and people. In the final analysis, the wealth and the strength of a nation are based upon its ability to conserve, develop and utilize effectively the innate capacities of its people. This is true not only of Singapore but necessarily of other developing nations. It can be safely presumed that since most developing states' concerns about the quality of their human resources and the progress of their nation-building work are inextricably bound to those about the quantity of their population, the "quality and not quantity" motto of Singapore's manpower development programs can also be their guiding principle.
Resumo:
Cross-sectoral interorganizational relationships in post-conflict situations occur regularly. Whether formal task forces, advisory groups or other ad hoc arrangements, these relations take place in chaotic and dangerous situations with urgent and turbulent political, economic and social environments. Furthermore, they typically involve a large number of players from many different nations, operating across sectors, and between multiple layers of bureaucracy and diplomacy. The organizational complexity staggers many participants and observers, as do the tasks they are charged with completing. Reform efforts in Bosnia and Herzegovina starting in 1995 may serve as the archetype model of conflict, transition and development for the 21st century. It wins this honor due not to its particular programmatic successes and failures, rather to the interorganizational complexity of the International Community. From the massive response to the crisis, to the modern nation-building policies it spawned, and the development assistance practices and institutional arrangements it created, the Bosnian development experience has much to offer by way of lessons learned. This manuscript frames the unique Bosnian development situation, and provides lessons learned from the experience of nation building given local realities. Pettigrew (1992) called this "contextualizing." While network and/or organizational structure, strategy and process explain many interorganizational relationship issues, the development variables identified in this manuscript prove equally important, yet elusive and difficult to measure despite their very real and overt presence.