Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan

South Sudan is undergoing a process of internationally-supported state building of which decentralisation forms part. For the people, decentralisation is understood as a right to self-rule based on native–stranger dichotomies and as a means of appropriating and incorporating an abstract and distant...

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Place / Publishing House:[Place of publication not identified] : Graduate Institute Publications, 2012
Year of Publication:2012
Language:English
Series:Development Studies ; Number 14
Physical Description:1 online resource (130 pages).
Notes:Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
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spelling Aeberli, Annina Author
Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
Graduate Institute Publications 2012
[Place of publication not identified] Graduate Institute Publications 2012
1 online resource (130 pages).
text txt
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Development Studies ; Number 14
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
English
Includes bibliographical references.
South Sudan is undergoing a process of internationally-supported state building of which decentralisation forms part. For the people, decentralisation is understood as a right to self-rule based on native–stranger dichotomies and as a means of appropriating and incorporating an abstract and distant state into the local context. The South Sudanese government, in contrast, sees decentralisation primarily as a tool for service delivery and development. Conversely, the international community, in its desire to guarantee international stability through the creation of Western-style states all over the world, sees decentralisation as one tool in the state-building toolbox. These different interpretations of decentralization may not only lead to misunderstandings, but different groups and different ways of understanding decentralisation have interacted throughout history, and attempts to impose a particular understanding on other actors continue. Annina Aeberli examines this hybridisation of state ‘decentralisation’ and argues that the international community and the government cannot and should not try to ignore people’s understandings and expectations: a state – in whatever form – always depends on the acceptance of the people.
CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Government - Non-U.S. HILCC
Law, Politics & Government HILCC
Government - Asia HILCC
decentralisation
development policies and practices
economic development
state construction
2-940503-02-8
language English
format eBook
author Aeberli, Annina
spellingShingle Aeberli, Annina
Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
Development Studies ;
author_facet Aeberli, Annina
author_variant a a aa
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Aeberli, Annina
title Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_full Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_fullStr Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_full_unstemmed Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_auth Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_new Decentralisation hybridized : a Western concept on its way through South Sudan
title_sort decentralisation hybridized : a western concept on its way through south sudan
series Development Studies ;
series2 Development Studies ;
publisher Graduate Institute Publications
publishDate 2012
physical 1 online resource (130 pages).
isbn 2-940503-03-6
2-940503-02-8
callnumber-first J - Political Science
callnumber-subject JQ - Europe
callnumber-label JQ3981
callnumber-sort JQ 43981 S873
illustrated Not Illustrated
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