After civil wars end, what can sustain peace in the long-term? In particular, how can outsiders facilitate durable conflict-managing institutions through statebuilding - a process that historically has been the outcome of bloody struggles to establish the state's authority over warlords, traditional authorities, and lawless territories?In this book, Timothy Sisk explores international efforts to help the world's most fragile post-civil war countries today build viable states that can provi
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Goetze, C. ; Guzina, D.: Peacebuilding, statebuilding, nationbuilding - turtles all the way down? - S. 319-347 Bliesemann de Guevara, B.: The state in times of statebuilding. - S. 348-368 Schlichte, K.: Uganda, or: the internationalisation of rule. - S. 369-383 Kostić, R.: Nationbuilding as an instrument of peace? exploring local attitudes towards international nationbuilding and reconciliation in Bosnia and Herzegovina. - S. m384-412 Shamsie, Y.: Haiti: appraising two rounds of peacebuilding using a poverty reduction lens. - S. 413-430 Deane, S.: Crime corrupting credibility: the problem of shifting from paramilitaries to parliamentarians. - S. 431-450 Guzina, D. ; Goetze, C.: Reflections on turtles' end: ways out of the research aporias on peace- and statebuilding. - S. 451-454
Critical security studies have emphasized that the identification of security threats paves the way for international and domestic interventions. Over the last three decades, statebuilding has developed into a powerful global practice of intervention in domestic affairs – not only with respect to failed states, but more broadly as a tool used in development cooperation and governance assistance. Statebuilding is increasingly framed as a policy which can enhance international, as well as domestic, security and peace, and yet historical and contemporary examples of statebuilding have often involved considerable violence. This volume draws on securitization studies to analyze the role of security in international and domestic statebuilding interventions. Individual case studies explore international statebuilding in Libya, Iraq, Kosovo, and Cameroon, discourses of intervention in the USA, and internal statebuilding in Turkey, Mexico, Tajikistan and South Sudan. These empirical investigations offer a compelling insight into the multiplicity, and global character, of security dynamics.
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