Political Science - ސިޔާސީ ޢިލްމު
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ArticleItem ތަރައްޤީގެ ޕްލޭން 2022-2026(ނިލަންދެއަތޮޅު ދެކުނުބުރީ އަތޮޅު ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ, 2022) ނިލަންދެއަތޮޅު ދެކުނުބުރީ އަތޮޅު ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ; Nilandhe Atholhu Dhekunuburee Atholhu Coucilge Idhara BookItem Decentralization framework in the Maldives : policy brief(Local Government Authority ލޯކަލް ގަވަރުމެންޓް އޮތޯރިޓީ, 2023) Local Government Authority ލޯކަލް ގަވަރުމެންޓް އޮތޯރިޓީ BookItem Maldives parliamentary elections(Commonwealth , 2019-04-19) Commonwealth; ކޮމަންވެލްތުFollowing an invitation from the Chairperson of the Elections Commission of Maldives (EC), the Commonwealth Secretary-General, The Rt Hon. Patricia Scotland QC, constituted an Observer Group for the Parliamentary Elections of 6 April 2019. The Commonwealth Observer Group for the 2019 Parliamentary Elections was led by Hon. Bruce Golding, former Prime Minister of Jamaica, and comprised seven eminent persons. A full list of members can be found at Annex 1. The Observer Group was supported by a five-person staff team from the Commonwealth Secretariat. BookItem Maldives : assault on civil and political rights(Amnesty International , 2015) Amnesty International; އެމްނެސްޓީ އިންޓަރނޭޝަނަލްAt the conclusion of a visit to the Republic of Maldives, Amnesty International believes human rights in the country have already been seriously eroded and are at risk of further deterioration. The following briefing is based on the findings of this visit, which was prompted by reports of blatant breaches of the right to a fair trial for some leading opponents of the government. Political tension in the country has been exacerbated by the harassment, detention and imprisonment of government opponents. Safeguards against human rights violations are progressively eroding and the government is failing in its duty to stop this. Serious irregularities within judicial processes have resulted in rampant violations of the right to a fair trial and a severe weakening of the fundamental principle of judicial impartiality. The Maldives’ human rights infrastructure and civil society are also under threat. The Human Rights Commission of the Maldives (HRCM), whose constitutional independence should be guarded by all other state institutions, has been subjected to judicial harassment for reporting to international mechanisms on human rights violations. Human rights NGOs are harassed and threatened that they will be deregistered. Political opponents of the government taking part in peaceful demonstrations have been arrested, detained for days or weeks, and released only after having conditions imposed that they must not take part in future demonstrations for a certain period of time. Journalists, human rights defenders and opposition politicians have received death threats, and police have failed to mount credible investigations to bring those responsible to justice. Political rallies have been attacked by gangs suspected of working in connivance with the police. None of the attackers, even when they are allegedly known to the police, are known to have been brought to justice. BookItem ތަރައްޤީގެ ޕްލޭން 2017-2021(ތިލަދުންމަތީ އުތުރުބުރީ އަތޮޅުކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ, 2021) ތިލަދުންމަތީ އުތުރުބުރީ އަތޮޅުކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ; Thiladhunmathee Uthuruburee Dhidhdhoo Atholhu Coucilge Idhara BookItem ތަރައްޤީގެ ޕްލޭން 2017-2021(ހުވަދުއަތޮޅު އުތުރުބުރީ ދާންދޫ ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ, 0221) ހުވަދުއަތޮޅު އުތުރުބުރީ ދާންދޫ ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ; Huvadhu Atholhu Uthuruburee Dhaandhoo Councilge Idhara BookItem ތަރައްޤީގެ ޕްލޭން 2017-2021(ތިލަދުންމަތީ ދެކުނުބުރީ ކުރިނބީ ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ, 2021) ތިލަދުންމަތީ ދެކުނުބުރީ ކުރިނބީ ކައުންސިލްގެ އިދާރާ; Secretariat of the Kurin’bi Council, South Thiladhunmathi BookItem Note on the Maldives(European Parliament ޔޫރޮޕިއަން ޕާރލިއަމެންޓް, 2006-05-24) Nuttin, Xavier; ޒޭވިއަރ ނަޓިން; Vuylsteke، Virginie; ވަރޖިނީ ވުޔިލްސްޓޭކް; Schulz، Stefan; ސްޓީފަން ޝަލްޒްThis note outlines the political and economic situation in the Maldives, recent event and issues - with special emphasis on constitutional reforms and recent social unrest - as well as the EU-Maldives relations BookItem Presidential election : pre-election assessment 2023(Transparency Maldives, 2023) Transparency Maldives; ޓްރާންސްޕޭރެންސީ މޯލްޑިވްސް BookItem Democracy at the crossroads : the result of 2013 Maldives democracy survey(Transparency Maldives, 2013-05-13) Transparency Maldives; ޓްރާންސްޕޭރެންސީ މޯލްޑިވްސްTransparency Maldives conducted a nationwide random survey of the Maldivian public in August 2013. The survey used repeatedly tested survey questions and the results are reliable within a margin of error of +⁄− 3.0%. That project was grounded in the conviction that the successful performance of democratic institutions requires a complementary set of supporting democratic values. The results point to significant democratic deficits within Maldivian political culture. Some of the critical findings are as follows: A clear majority of Maldivians think that “politics” is the most important problem facing the country. Fully half of the public is dissatisfied with the way democracy operates in the Maldives. The deepest pockets of dissatisfaction are among the young and the well-educated. Moreover, for many, the notion of democracy carries negative connotations. Democracy entails widespread commitment to the principle of equality. But a substantial proportion of the public, about two–thirds, do not support the idea of gender equality. What is truly striking is that women are less supportive of gender equality than are men. A third troubling finding concerns the low levels of confidence that citizens have in their key representative institutions; institutions that are vital links between the citizens and the state. Out of 15 sets of institutions considered, Maldivians express the least confidence in parliament and political parties. 62% say that they have no confidence at all in parliament. 58% hold that view for political parties. The courts and the office of the President rate a little better.
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