| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
Rising Insurgency, Faltering Democratisation in NepalDepartment of Political Science Tulane University The objective is to chart Nepal's recent political history in order to explain how a seemingly anachronistic Maoist movement emerged to pose a threatnot just to Nepal but much of South Asia. The ineffectual political process that failed to resolve the country's most pressing problemeconomic developmentis examined. The infighting, support base, social grievances, ideology and strategy of the Maoist insurgency are described. The Maoists transnational network is identified, as is India's often ambiguous response to the move-ment. Special attention is given to the paradoxical dialectic linking the march of the Maoists with the manoeuvrings of Nepal's king. The conclusion drawn is that democratisation in Nepal has been undermined by an odd combination of Maoist insurgency, dysfunc-tional political parties, the monarchy's putschism, in addition to the widely-acknowledged failure of economic development. In an interdependent world, the result of one small state's descent into political instabilityand the rise of insurgency in ithas direct conse-quences for other larger more stable countries.
Journal of South Asian Development, Vol. 1, No. 1,
51-76 (2006) |
||||