After the collapse of Saddam's regime in 2003, the most important
issue in Iraq was the power-sharing arrangements among communities.
At this point, the Iraqi people were presented with the chance to
look for another political system which would retain all
communities' participation: consociational democracy, an ideal
theme in that kind of system everybody has a voice and contributes
to the political process. Therefore, the US-led coalition forces
were invested in working to form political order according to
power-sharing arrangements and recognized that they needed to do
this by gathering Iraqi's politicians to reach an agreement about
power-sharing arrangements.This book concentrates on connections or
divergences between formal or informal examples of
consociationalism, and the actual practice of these between 2003
and 2014 in Iraq. The author argues that consociational elements
are partially reflected in the permanent constitution, and
partially implemented throughout the period under investigation,
bearing in mind the positive role of the US-led coalition.
General
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