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Political Marketplace in Sites of Intractable Conflicts: Implications to humanitarian aid and development delivery of NGOs

  1. Title statementPolitical Marketplace in Sites of Intractable Conflicts: Implications to humanitarian aid and development delivery of NGOs [rukopis] / Joshua Angelo Bata
    Additional Variant TitlesPolitical Marketplace in Sites of Intractable Conflicts: Implications to humanitarian aid and development delivery of NGOs
    Personal name Bata, Joshua Angelo, (dissertant)
    Translated titlePolitical Marketplace in Sites of Intractable Conflicts: Implications to humanitarian aid and development delivery of NGOs
    Issue data2021
    Phys.des.68 p. (23296 words), 10p. app. : il., mapy, grafy, tab. + CD ROM
    NoteVed. práce Lenka Dušková
    Oponent Hynek Melichar
    Another responsib. Dušková, Lenka, 1980- (thesis advisor)
    Melichar, Hynek (opponent)
    Another responsib. Univerzita Palackého. Katedra rozvojových studií (degree grantor)
    Keywords political marketplace * NGO * South Sudan * international actors * political marketplace * NGO * South Sudan * international actors
    Form, Genre diplomové práce master's theses
    UDC (043)378.2
    CountryČesko
    Languageangličtina
    Document kindPUBLIKAČNÍ ČINNOST
    TitleMgr.
    Degree programNavazující
    Degree programGeography
    Degreee disciplineInternational Development Studies
    book

    book

    Kvalifikační práceDownloadedSizedatum zpřístupnění
    00274231-684185965.pdf62.7 MB31.05.2021
    PosudekTyp posudku
    00274231-ved-633934512.pdfPosudek vedoucího
    00274231-opon-473427354.pdfPosudek oponenta
    Ostatní přílohySizePopis
    00274231-other-489128777.pdf304 KB

    Using Alex de Waal's political marketplace framework, this study examines how NGOs contribute to the political marketplace reproduction in South Sudan. This study employs process tracing as its methodology and uses data from Aid Worker Security Database, UN OCHA's Humanitarian Access Incidence Overview, and other reports. The study also outlines how NGOs and political actors interact in South Sudan's political market and the dilemmas faced by both actors. Likewise, the study demonstrates how the political marketplace framework views NGO activities. Analyzing the transmission of causal forces from NGO activities to political marketplace reproduction reveals that NGOs potentially contribute to political market reproduction when political finance is low and when NGOs shift the incentive structure of political market actors. This paper argues that the consistent but low-intensity attacks against aid workers and their assets have been the empirical manifestation of political actors' strategy concerning NGO activities in South Sudan. The paper reveals that NGO activities transmit their causal force that contributes to reproducing the political marketplace in South Sudan when such activities enable the persistence of the exchange of loyalty and violence that is the ultimate expression of the political marketplace logic.Using Alex de Waal's political marketplace framework, this study examines how NGOs contribute to the political marketplace reproduction in South Sudan. This study employs process tracing as its methodology and uses data from Aid Worker Security Database, UN OCHA's Humanitarian Access Incidence Overview, and other reports. The study also outlines how NGOs and political actors interact in South Sudan's political market and the dilemmas faced by both actors. Likewise, the study demonstrates how the political marketplace framework views NGO activities. Analyzing the transmission of causal forces from NGO activities to political marketplace reproduction reveals that NGOs potentially contribute to political market reproduction when political finance is low and when NGOs shift the incentive structure of political market actors. This paper argues that the consistent but low-intensity attacks against aid workers and their assets have been the empirical manifestation of political actors' strategy concerning NGO activities in South Sudan. The paper reveals that NGO activities transmit their causal force that contributes to reproducing the political marketplace in South Sudan when such activities enable the persistence of the exchange of loyalty and violence that is the ultimate expression of the political marketplace logic.

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