Beyond personalism: elite politics and political families in Cambodia
In: Contemporary Southeast Asia, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 241-264
Abstract
The regime in Cambodia has been increasingly described as personalist, with power centralized in the hands of its long-serving leader, Prime Minister Hun Sen. Recent scholarship has described the ways he has, over time, concentrated power in key institutions for his political survival. The prime minister's advancing age, however, has raised questions over the future of the regime without him at the helm. This article analyses the process of regime management and the ongoing succession planning in Cambodia, thereby providing a nuanced account of a leader who is not unassailable or unresponsive to the needs of other elites but must continue to manage factional and other interests within his ruling coalition to an extent not captured in the current personalist literature on Cambodia. The evidence for this may be observed in Hun Sen's attempts to manage a dynastic transition on two fronts: to ensure the pre-eminence of his family among Cambodia's elites, while maintaining a regime organized against the broader interests outside his coalition. This exemplifies the twin pressures facing all autocrats, and in Cambodia it exposes the state-society schism embedded in the process of state and regime-making since 1979 that continues to shape its politics. (Contemp Southeast Asia/GIGA)
Sprachen
Englisch
ISSN: 1793-284X
Problem melden