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Understanding Somali political culture: Clan Politics and Power struggling

Understanding Somali political culture: Clan Politics and Power struggling

2019
Mohamed R . Hassan
Abstract
The power competition between clan lines in Somalia weakened any other effort that directed genuine state-building from grassroots that works effectively. As long as this competition is exist none clan will able to take full control of state as well as the country could not be stable. In addition contextually running political power is not more legitimate and it could certain extent produce some intra-communal conflict. Moreover, it is likely that power competition is seemingly a triangle simply because Digil-mirifle given by "Parliament Speaker" as quota for those remained are not unanimous the power sharing approach even the Isaak's parliament seats and cabinet are underestimated regardless of their population size and what they are in the country by far. Nevertheless, Banadiri clans and ethnic minorities are also underrepresented. In that respect this paper demonstrating how Somalia's political dispensation is usually unfair and marginalized some groups even major clans like Isaak.

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