An Analysis on Kazakhstan Power Succession in 2019: Institutionalization of Power Duopoly

Asia Review ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-211
Author(s):  
Dowon Yun
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 25-35
Author(s):  
Lance L P GORE

Has Chinese elite politics attained a level of institutionalisation that long-term stability can be expected? This article explains the six-phased cadre performance evaluation system widely adopted at local power succession process and analyses the ways in which this system was selectively used in the making of the 18th Party Central Committee. Despite the various loopholes, the system does impose some constraints on arbitrary power; its wide adoption at the lower levels and the flatter power distribution enhance its legitimacy and promotes its institutionalisation.


Author(s):  
M. Djamaluddin Miri

Mughal was one of the Islamic Kingdoms that stay long for about 342 years, starting from Sultan Zahr al-Din Muhammad (1483—1530 A.D) until Sultan Siraj al-Din Bahadur Syah (1837—1858 A.D). There are two prominent factors which caused the Kingdom of Mughal separated each other and faced the decrease, internal and external factors. Internally, the Kingdom of Mughal faced the decrease because of no system and mechanism on power succession, and also the lack leadership integrity of the next generation who descended the former leaders. The hedonism life style also became the main cause of the complicated political situation on the Kingdom. Moreover, the political policy which tends to be more puritanical and ideological also ruined the governmental system. Those internal factors, then, caused weak political control and powerless authority of the Kingdom in front of other kingdoms. As a consequence, many rebellions happened everywhere. It absolutely made the power of the Kingdom one by one belongs to other kingdoms.


Social Forces ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 600
Author(s):  
Frederick W. Frey ◽  
Floyd Hunter

2014 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongseok Woo

Military-first politics has been at the heart of the unexpected regime stability in North Korea under Kim Jong-il and his son Jong-un. This article analyzes Kim Jong-il’s military-first politics as a strategic choice for regime survival, in which the locus of political power switched from the party to the military. At the same time, Kim Jong-il formulated a complex system of circumventing the possibility of the armed forces’ political domination, including personalistic control using sticks and carrots, fortifying security and surveillance institutions, and compartmentalizing the security institutions for intra- and inter-organizational checks and balances to prevent the emergence of organized opposition to the regime. Although an effective short-term solution, military-first politics could never be a long-term strategy for building gangseongdaeguk (a powerful and prosperous nation). The current Kim Jong-un regime needs to conduct sweeping reforms to address dire economic difficulties, which might result in a departure from his father’s legacy and downgrade the military’s power. In this process, the current regime’s (in)stability will depend on how it maintains a balance between revoking military-first politics and preserving the armed forces’ allegiance.


2020 ◽  
pp. 404-412
Author(s):  
K.M. Klimova

Political discourse has lately become subject to linguistic analysis. Politics and global affairs intertwine with human everyday life so seamlessly that the necessity to identify, understand, and explain their manipulative influence becomes more and more avid. The article makes a conscious effort to analyze Spanish monarch’s statements in terms of forms, figures of speech and stylistic devices as well as how intentional understatement is used to manipulate the audience’s perception of the current state of affairs. Thus, a clear manifestation of power succession principle in the monarch’s political discourse can be observed as well as conscious efforts in indirect manipulative influence on peoples’ thoughts and actions.


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