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State-Building in Crisis: The Sejdic-Finci Deadlock and its Impact on the Politics of Corruption in BiH

Adam Fagan
Kings College London
Sean Parramore
Queen Mary, University of London
Adam Fagan
Kings College London

Abstract

This paper investigates whether the Sejdic-Finci ruling triggered a constitutional and political deadlock in BiH used by domestic elites as an opportunity to maintain the status-quo and to advance regressive reforms as opposed to a liberal state-building agenda. It has long been acknowledged that the constitution of BiH, agreed at Dayton in 1995, acts as a formidable barrier to sustainable political, socio-economic and administrative change. In 2009 the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ‘Sejdic-Finci’ ruling deemed parts of BiH’s constitution discriminatory towards minorities. What were the domestic dynamics behind the Sejdic-Finci deadlock, and what were the consequences for the anti-corruption effort? Using an institutionalist analytical toolset and process tracing it is contended that the Sejdic-Finci deadlock revealed the inherent contradictions between promoting technical and political reforms proposed by the 'institutionalisation before liberalisation' state-building stratagem.