RT Article T1 Ethnic Politics and Political Violence in Post-2001 Afghanistan: The 2014 Presidential Election JF Terrorism and political violence VO 33 IS 8 SP 1692 OP 1712 A1 Sahar, Arif A2 Sahar, Aqila LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/178352958X AB This article evaluates the political dynamics of the 2014 presidential election to explore the sense of nationhood that could have formed in post-2001 Afghanistan and to gauge its strength. It examines frontrunner candidates – Mohammad Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah’s – campaign rhetoric and processes they utilized to manipulate ethnic identities for political ends. Ethnic identities sharpened by ideological and political polarisation during the civil war (1978–2001), continue to play a critical part in the political economy dynamics of post-2001 era. With the popular patriotic idea of citizenship remaining weak, the abundance of ethnic identities provides a paradigm around which power contenders articulate messages that easily feed into popular perceptions of “us” and “other”. The article contextualizes representative and consociational democracy exploring whether these models of democracy offer any solution to social cleavages in Afghanistan. It argues that elites’ manipulation of ethnic identities and distribution of resources through ethnic shares (Bonn Conference 2001, National Unity Government (NUG) 2014) might reinforce ethnic boundaries, leading to deeper consolidation of ethnic divisions. K1 Ethnizität K1 Politik K1 Gewalt K1 Präsidentenwahl K1 Ethnic-grievance K1 Elections K1 Identity K1 Ethnicity K1 Political Violence K1 Afghanistan DO 10.1080/09546553.2019.1642199