CISA student Colonel Thokozani Andrew Chazema's article, "Strategic Equilibrium in Civil-Military Relations: Insights
from Malawi’s Democratic Transition," was published by the International and Public Affairs journal.
Abstract: This article examines the strategic equilibrium of civil-military relations in democratic Malawi, focusing on the effectiveness of institutional actors in striking a balance between military professionalism and democratic accountability. Drawing on qualitative data from 65 informants across the judiciary, legislature, civil society, and the Malawi Defence Force (MDF), the study conceptualizes effectiveness as a dynamic interplay of constitutional fidelity, participatory engagement, and operational legitimacy. It integrates four theoretical traditions: Huntington’s Institutional Theory, Schiff’s Concordance Theory, Feaver’s Agency Theory, and Janowitz’s sociological perspective, providing a multidimensional lens for evaluating actor performance in transitional democracies. The Rhombus Diamond Framework is introduced as a diagnostic tool that positions the military as a fulcrum balancing four civilian nodes: elected authorities, civil authorities, civil society/media, and the judiciary. Effectiveness is assessed using five indicators: deliberative participation, monitoring mechanisms, judicial responsiveness, operational satisfaction, and peace/security outcomes. Findings reveal that while the MDF enjoys high public trust and operational competence, civilian actors face persistent challenges, including technical capacity gaps, politicization, and institutional inertia. Comparative insights from Ghana, Zambia, and Argentina underscore the importance of meritocracy, civic education, and institutional integrity in fostering effective civil-military relations. The study highlights the need for recalibrated actor roles, joint training programs, and decentralized security structures to bridge the familiarity gap and enhance participatory governance. By integrating indigenous epistemology with comparative analysis, the article presents a context-sensitive model for assessing institutional performance and informing policy reform. Ultimately, this study contributes to academic and policy debates by offering a grounded, actor-specific framework for strengthening democratic oversight and sustaining strategic equilibrium in civil-military relations. It advocates for embedding the Rhombus Diamond Framework into national security policy to promote balanced governance, safeguard constitutionalism, and ensure resilient civil-military synergy in transitional democratic contexts.
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