Delays will not improve Afghan elections / Scott worden.
Material type: TextLanguage: Series: ; (Peacebriefing | ; United States Institute of Peace (USIP) ; 9)Publication details: Washington, D.C. : United States Institute of Peace (USIP), 2010.Description: 5 p. ; 30 cmSubject(s):- Elections – Afghanistan
- Presidents – Afghanistan – Elections
- Presidents – Election, 2009 – Afghanistan
- Local elections – Afghanistan
- Afghanistan. Ulasi Jirgah – Elections
- Elections – Corrupt practices – Afghanistan
- National security – Afghanistan
- Political stability – Afghanistan
- Internal stability – Afghanistan
- Pamphlet JQ 1769 .A5 .W67 /2010
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Pamphlet JQ 1769 .A5 .W67 /2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 21249 |
Caption title.
“United States Institute of Peace”—at head of title.
“February 2, 2010”.
Summary: The presidential and provincial council elections held in Afghanistan in August 2009 were marred by irregularities and fraud, leading voters and candidates to question the fairness and utility of the democratic process there. The Afghan government announced in late January that it will delay parliamentary elections until September 2010 –several months beyond the deadline set by Afghanistan's constitution. The extra time is needed to make adequate logistical preparations, but little has been done so far to reform electoral institutions or policies to prevent a repeat of the problems of the 2009 elections. Without significant changes in the personnel and policies of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC)—the constitutional body responsible for overseeing all electoral processes the 2010 election is likely to fall below international standards and risks undermining government (and international) legitimacy at a critical period for the counterinsurgency strategy. In addition, significant long-term reforms, including a wholesale revision of the voter registry, must be initiated now to ensure that the district council and other future Afghan elections are credible and acceptable—(p. [1]).