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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7-page paper discusses the form a new Iraqi government should take; the importance of a solid middle class; terrorism; the role of foreign countries in rebuilding Iraq; and a recommendation that the US find an exit strategy immediately. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVIraqGv.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
government. This paper will explore the problem and recommend policies that may help to create a new government and stabilize the country. Forming a Stable Government Iraq is
a nation comprised of many different ethnic and religious minorities, many of which are hostile to each other, a fact which is usually seen as a stumbling block in creating
a stable government (Dawisha, 2003). However, there may be an upside to this internal conflict, in that these antagonistic factions could serve as a system of checks and balances
on each other that would "promote democracy at the expense of rigid communal particularism" (Dawisha, 2003). The trick will be to construct a "constitutional arrangement that makes sense," given
the diversity of Iraqs society and culture (Dawisha, 2003). The best type of government in this case is a federal system like that in the U.S. (Dawisha, 2003). Although
Iraq has three main ethnic and religious divisions (the Kurdish north, the Sunnis in the center and the Shiites in the South) it would be a mistake to build the
government with only these three regions or groups as participants; doing so would exacerbate current tensions and could possibly result in ethnic cleansing (Dawisha, 2003). Currently, Iraq is divided
into 18 administrative districts, and keeping that structure intact would best serve the interest of the nation and of the new government (Dawisha, 2003). Each of the 18
units would "elect a local government and send representatives to the upper chamber of a new parliament" (Dawisha, 2003). This new upper chamber, since it would be based on
regional representation, would have several advantages: it would give all regions a "voice at the center, check the centralization of power, and ... minimize regional corruption" (Dawisha, 2003).
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