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dc.contributor.authorSuhrke, Astri
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-04T08:17:34Z
dc.date.available2018-01-04T08:17:34Z
dc.date.issued2011-01-01
dc.identifieroai:www.cmi.no:3684
dc.identifier.citationin Whit Mason, ed.: The rule of law in Afghanistan. Missing in inaction. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press pp. 225-248
dc.identifier.isbn978-1-107-00319-4
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11250/2474768
dc.description.abstractIn the contemporary writing on state-building in post-conflict situations, remarkably little attention is paid to what it takes to build a state. There is much advice on policy priorities and sequencing – security, rule of law, humanitarian assistance, fast pay-out of a peace dividend, demobilisation, elections, and so on – but much less attention to the basic ingredients that are required for the enterprise. Historical experience and the political science literature suggest four necessary components: coercion, capital, legitimacy and leadership. In Europe, as Charles Tilly [1990] tells us, the modern state developed as local rulers marshalled revenues to pay for armies to fight other rulers; protection and increasingly other services were provided to their subjects to ensure continued flows of resources, and the state became a going concern. Time is commonly also added in recognition of the fact that most contemporary states are the product of a long historical process of state-formation. Yet even these cases typically have some periods of more active state-building, when leaders mobilise arms, capital and legitimacy in ways that decisively strengthen the state. Given the internationalised nature of current state-building, arguably the most central, but also the least addressed, question is therefore to what extent the four components of state-building can be effectively provided by international actors, as opposed to being mobilised through an endogenous process. The present chapter explores this question with reference to post-2001 Afghanistan, first by reviewing the features of successful non-European state-building processes, and then by contrasting these with the tension-filled experience in Afghanistan.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherCambridge University Press
dc.relationThe rule of law in Afghanistan. Missing in inaction
dc.relation.ispartofThe rule of law in Afghanistan. Missing in inaction
dc.relation.ispartofseriesThe rule of law in Afghanistan. Missing in inaction
dc.relation.urihttps://www.cmi.no/publications/3684-upside-down-state-building
dc.subjectAfghanistan
dc.titleExogenous state-building: The contradictions of the international project in Afghanistan
dc.typeChapter
dc.identifier.cristin917941


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