Transacting Transition
The Micropolitics of Democracy Assistance in the Former Yugoslavia
Edited by Keith Brown
Paperback: 978 1 56549 222 6
Price: $24.95  

Publisher: Kumarian Press
August 2006 , 264 pp., 6" x 9"
In Transacting Transition, scholars and practitioners with first-hand knowledge of foreign assistance programs, recount what happens when democracy goes local, and principles like transparency, gender equality, interethnic tolerance and cooperation, run up against particular realities-political agendas, self-interest and memories of conflict.

Focused on the former Yugoslavia, where the 1990s saw an unprecedented investment of time and energy by a host of international organizations in processes of reconstruction and democracy assistance, the contributors offer description and analysis of diagnostic cases of international intervention to explore how the mission and vision of "democracy promotion" is enacted on the ground. Their experiences reflect wider trends in the evolution of U.S. democracy assistance after the end of the Cold War, which has increasingly focused on locally-oriented development and civic action as a necessary component of democratic transition. In these cases, individuals from outside the region found themselves charged with advancing ambitious agendas of social and political change while dealing with the micropolitics of particular situations-where, for example, village solidarity is fractured by old rivalries, participation in decision-making is habitually restricted by gender or ethnicity, or where donors and implementers disagree on the best way forward.

The book includes an overall introduction and eight chapters focusing on case-studies from Kosovo, Serbia and Macedonia. Each case is described by a participant and put in wider context by a short editorial introduction. The book is intended to be broadly accessible to readers and students interested in understanding what is entailed in making grand visions of democratization work.

Other Contributors: Jeff S. Merritt, Dennison Lane, Paul J. Nuti, Claire Sneed, Sally Broughton-Micova, Clemson Turregano, and Chip Gagnon.

Table of Contents:
1) The new Ugly Americans? Consolidating democracy in the former Yugoslavia; 2) Quick Impact, Slow Recovery? Funders' Priorities & the Local Realities of Transition Programming; 3) Who’s in Charge? Reflections on the UN Administration in Kosovo; 4) Towards Reflective Practice: Understanding and Negotiating Democracy in Macedonia; 5) Neutrality, Empowerment, Gender: Fostering Democratic Culture in South-Western Serbia; 6) Confidence-building, Market forces and the public good: Challenges of media intervention in post-conflict Macedonia; 7) Trust, bricks and mortar: KFOR and the Rebuilding of the Pones Schoolhouse; 8) Catholic Relief Services, USAID, and Authentic Partnership in Serbia




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Reviews & Endorsements:
"Keith Brown and his colleagues have done what no one else has managed: to listen to the voices of the new generation of "democracy-promoters" and to draw powerful lessons from their experience. Assessment reports, lists of lessons learned, and proposals for doing things better next time around are legion, and US government offices are piled high with reports about what seems to work and what doesn't. But Transacting Transition casts a sophisticated and critical eye on the entire enterprise of crafting democracies from the ground up. Anyone who believes in democratic governance but worries about outsiders' ability to build it from scratch should read this book."
- Charles King, Chairman of the Faculty and Ion Ratiu Associate Professor, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University
"This is a useful collection of studies that should be of interest to practitioners, policy-makers and funding agencies, as well as to analysts of post-conflict politics and to those with an interest in the politics of the former Yugoslavia."
- Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans, August 2007