ABSTRACT

This edited book sets out and engages with some of the key policies, practices and paradigms of external intervention in the case of state support and reconstruction.

Many assumptions about statebuilding have been reconsidered in the wake of Iraq, and ongoing problems in other states such as Afghanistan, Bosnia and Kosovo. Rather than being a regional survey or a policy-orientated ‘lessons learned’ book, this collection explores the broader framing of policy goals, statebuilding practices and the consensus on the need for Western states and international institutions to be engaged in this policy area. The volume is divided into three parts: the first engages with some of the key policy frameworks and conceptual issues raised by recent statebuilding interventions; the second considers core statebuilding practices; and the third reconsiders statebuilding paradigms more broadly. The essays open up debate and critical discussion in the field at a time when many advocates of extending statebuilding intervention suggest that the complex nature of the problems of non-Western states and societies mean that it will inevitably be contradictory and limited in its results.

 

 

 

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |84 pages

Policy frameworks

chapter |25 pages

Ownership in theory and in practice

Transfer of authority in UN statebuilding operations

chapter |30 pages

Do the root causes of civil war matter?

On using knowledge to improve peacebuilding interventions

chapter |27 pages

The myth of the failed state and the war on terror

A challenge to the conventional wisdom

part |64 pages

Practices of statebuilding

chapter |21 pages

Reconstruction

An agenda

chapter |18 pages

Statebuilding and force

The proper role of foreign militaries

chapter |23 pages

Police restructuring in Bosnia-Herzegovina

Problems of internationally led security sector reform

part |67 pages

Paradigms

chapter |24 pages

Hybrid polities and indigenous pluralities

Advanced lessons in statebuilding from Cambodia

chapter |21 pages

Debt, development and intervention in Africa

The contours of a sovereign frontier