Democratic development and Quest of statehood: Evidence from Somaliland
Description
The study examined the role of democratic development on quest of statehood, in Somaliland specially it focuses in key democratic components rule of law, electoral processes, institutional effectiveness and multi-party system, enhance Quest of statehood, pursuit of international recognition. Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991 and has since made significant advancements toward democratic governance. The study used Mixed approach qualitative focus key stakeholders and quantitively original survey data (n= 232) from government officials, academicians and politicians in Hargeisa, the study assesses the perception of, (I) electoral process, (II) the rule of law, (III) government institutions and (IV) multi-party system. The findings reveal that democratic pillars practices enhance Somaliland's domestic legitimacy and external image and positively correlated international recognition, strongly Multi-party system and election are the most predictors. Regression analysis indicates that democratic factors increase approximately 22% of the variance in recognition prospects. the general direction shows that democratic development improves Somaliland's international reputation and increases its own legitimacy. The study discovered democracy can serve as soft power statehood quest and internal legitimization but is insufficient for achieving statehood. recognition decisions are often shaped by geopolitical interests, strategic consideration, relation other states, rather than normative principles. This research highlights there are others ways to achieve international recognition rather democratic merit in the modern state systems. the study can be used policy formulation on de facto states, academic research.
Files
Steps to reproduce
self funding for rewarding Masters degree and facilitated Jimma University
Institutions
- Jimma University College of Social Sciences and Law