Story | Dec. 15, 2025

Colonel Thokozani Andrew Chazema, CISA Class of 2026 | Reframing Civil-Military Relations in Africa: Empirical Insights from Malawi’s Rhombus Diamond Model

CISA student Colonel Thokozani Andrew Chazema's article, "Reframing Civil-Military Relations in Africa: Empirical 
Insights from Malawi’s Rhombus Diamond Model," was published by the Social Sciences journal.

Abstract: This article introduces the Rhombus Diamond Framework, a contextually grounded model for managing civil-military relations in democratic Malawi. Developed through a mixed-methods study comprising 386 structured survey responses and 65 key informant interviews, the framework synthesizes insights from elected officials, civil authorities, the judiciary, the military, and civilians. It positions the military as a fulcrum balancing democratic governance and national security, addressing the civil-military problematique through eight interlocking mechanisms—meritocracy, joint training, representational recruitment, and civic engagement among them. Quantitative regression analysis and qualitative content coding validate the framework’s predictive strength and institutional relevance. The model builds on classical theories of civilian control and concordance, while integrating indigenous values and participatory governance. It offers actionable guidance for policy formulation, curriculum development, and institutional reform, and presents a replicable approach for democratic consolidation in transitional states. The framework contributes to reimagining civil-military relations as a dynamic equilibrium rooted in legitimacy and professionalism

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