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Book

Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi

Book

Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi

DOI link for Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi

Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi book

Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi

DOI link for Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi

Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi book

ByStacey M. Mitchell
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2018
eBook Published 13 June 2018
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429508028
Pages 246
eBook ISBN 9780429508028
Subjects Area Studies, Politics & International Relations
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Mitchell, S. (2018). Institutional Legacies, Decision Frames and Political Violence in Rwanda and Burundi (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429508028

ABSTRACT

Rwanda and Burundi are strikingly similar countries that underwent democratization in the early 1990s. In both, resistance to democratic reforms led to coups d’état and presidential assassinations. A conundrum arises in terms of what transpires next. In Rwanda, total genocide was perpetrated by extremist Hutu actors, including government officials, upon the country’s Tutsi and politically moderate Hutu populations. In Burundi the coup d’état failed and instead ushered in a lengthy period of civil war. This divergence in outcome is puzzling given the similarity of these two countries, and it is not adequately explained by studies that address collective violence in each.

This book utilizes an integrative approach that facilitates the formation of an explanation that more fully accounts for variation in the type of collective violence that occurred in Rwanda and Burundi. Showing that political actors – during periods of major institutional change – do not all respond to or perceive reform in the exact same manner or in a necessarily rational manner, this book makes an important contribution to the literature on ethnic conflict, collective violence and democratization in Africa.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

The puzzle

chapter 1|22 pages

Extant explanations of collective violence in Rwanda and Burundi

chapter 2|27 pages

An alternative explanation of collective violence

chapter 3|28 pages

Methodology and research design

chapter 4|29 pages

A story of twins

chapter 5|29 pages

Social structures and collective violence in Rwanda and Burundi

chapter 6|31 pages

Traditional political institutions and collective violence in Rwanda and Burundi

chapter 7|21 pages

Reference points, decision frames and the choice to perpetrate genocide

chapter 8|13 pages

Conclusions

chapter |13 pages

Afterword

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