Warlords, Intervention, and State Consolidation: A Typology of Political Orders in Weak and Failed States
Publication year
2016Author(s)
Source
Security Studies, 25, 1, (2016), pp. 85-110ISSN
Annotation
25 februari 2016
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
CICAM
Journal title
Security Studies
Volume
vol. 25
Issue
iss. 1
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 85
Page end
p. 110
Subject
Institute for Management ResearchAbstract
Despite efforts to bolster failed states over the past two decades, many states in the international system still exhibit endemic weakness. External intervention often leads to political instability and in most cases fails to foster state consolidation, instead empowering and creating ties with the ones it aims to weaken. Using the case of Afghanistan, I develop a typology of political orders that explains variation in degrees of state consolidation and provides the basis for more systematic comparative analysis. I demonstrate the resilience of a political logic according to which non-state armed actors (warlords) “shape-shift” and constantly reinvent themselves to adapt to changing political environments. This article, based on extensive field research in Afghanistan, shows why failed states are unlikely to consolidate and exhibit Western-style state building, as a result of intervention or otherwise.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [242586]
- Electronic publications [129566]
- Nijmegen School of Management [18514]
- Open Access publications [104156]
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