Home
About CDI
Contact CDI
Links

CDI Activities

By Country/Region

Asia-Pacific | Fiji |
s
Indonesia | Papua New
s
Guinea |
Solomon Islands |
s
Timor-Leste | Vanuatu

By Sector
Political Party Development
Parliamentary Strengthening
By Type
Projects | Research
Events | Further Activities
Cross-cutting Themes
Gender & Political Leadership
 
 
 

Publications

2008

Democratic Validation

Party Politics in East Asia

2007

'Democratization and Electoral Reform in the Asia-Pacific Region: Is There an "Asian Model" of Democracy?' - Benjamin Reilly | Comparative Political Studies, 2007:40, pp. 1350 -1371

CDI launches Democracy and Diversity: Political Engineering in the Asia-Pacific - Benjamin Reilly, Oxford University Press, 2006.
'Electoral Systems & Party Systems in East Asia' - Benjamin Reilly, Journal of East Asian Studies, 7, 2007.
'Political Engineering in the Asia-Pacific' - Benjamin Reilly, Journal of Democracy , Vol. 18, No. 1, 2007.

2006

'Political Engineering and Party Politics in Conflict-Prone Societies' - Benjamin Reilly, Democratization, Vol.13, No.5, December 2006, pp.811–827

CDI and the Journal of Democracy.
CDI Launches Landmark Publication: Political Parties in the Pacific Islands Roland Rich, Luke Hambly, and Michael Morgan (eds)
Benjamin Reilly, 'Political reform in Papua New Guinea: testing the evidence', Pacific Economic Bulletin, 21:1, pp. 187-94.

2005

Review in Democratization of the UN Role in Promoting Democracy - Between Ideals and Realit y , Edward Newman and Roland Rich (eds).
Michael Morgan, Cultures of Dominance: Institutional and Cultural Influences on Parliamentary Politics in Melanesia.
Michael Morgan, Building Political Governance Frameworks.

 

CDI Research Home
CDI Policy Paper Series
CDI Further Research
CDI.News Feature Articles
CDI Research 1998-2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Centre for Democratic Institutions (CDI) is a government-funded body that supports the efforts of new democracies in the Asia-Pacific region to strengthen their political systems. It provides training, technical assistance and peer support for parliamentarians and emerging leaders in Southeast Asia and the South Pacific, with a particular focus on Indonesia, Timor-Leste, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and Fiji.

The Australian Government established CDI in 1998. It is funded primarily by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID). One of the primary ways in which CDI works to promote democracy is through strengthening parliamentary governance and political parties. The Centre focusses on parliamentary and political party development, and conducts flagship training courses and policy-relevant research on these subjects.
© The Centre for Democratic Institutions, The Australian National University. Please direct all comments to cdi@anu.edu.au. Last modified: 2 September, 2008 CRICOSProvider Number: 00120C Web Counter

 

stats counter
Free Hit Counters