Knowledge

State-building

Source 📝

1193:, political, military, and ideological power is concentrated to be conducive to policy continuation. The bureaucracies implemented are well-trained, well-paid and highly competitive in recruitment and promotion. Economically successful states in East Asia have taken on programs to create infrastructure, subsidize the farming sector, provide credit, support spending on targeted research, and invest in health and education. However, most governments are non-developmental and unstable. Furthermore, even when countries have tried to pursue authoritarian strategies that have worked, specifically Brazil, a divided military, regional oligarchs in power, and vast disparities in inequality delegitimized the regime. A democratic regime engages citizens more actively than a top-down government. It respects the right of citizens to contest policies. Successful democracies developed political capacities by nurturing active citizenship, maintaining electoral competitiveness that gave value to the votes of the poor, fostering political parties that were strongly oriented towards equality and having strong party-social movement ties. 920:
autonomous recovery exists as a process that offers "lasting peace, a systematic reduction in violence, and post-war political and economic development in the absence of international intervention." The argument suggests that external interference detracts from the state-building by-products produced from war or military victories, given that military intervention makes rebel victories less likely and that peace-building discourages violence. External support undermines the creation of a self-sustaining relationship between rulers or political leaders and their constituents. Foreign aid promotes governments that maintain the same leaders in power and discourages developing a revenue extraction plan that would bind local politicians and local populations. War or military victories create conditions for self-sustaining and representative institutional arrangements through the domestic legitimacy and capacity of state revenue extraction that are by-products of war.
916:(1992-1995), East Timor, and Sierra Leone. Such interventions are alternatively described as "neotrusteeship" or "neoimperialism". Under this framework, strong states take over part of all of the governance of territories with underdeveloped existing governing structures, often with the backing of international legal authority. Unlike the classic imperialism of the 19th and early 20th centuries, this type of intervention is aimed at (re)building local state structures and turning over governance to them as quickly as possible. Such efforts vary in the scope of their objectives, however, with some believing that sweeping change can be accomplished through the sufficient and intelligent application of personnel, money, and time, while others believe that any such plans will founder on the inherent unpredictability of interventions and that lengthy, sustained interventions often prevent local leaders from taking responsibility and strengthen insurgent forces. 968:
power and authority with certain factions within the military, allowing them to carve up state resources to the detriment of state-building exercises. However, in weak states where the government has not sufficient power to control peripheries of the territory, alliances with the elites could strengthen the state's governing power. Yet, these alliances are successful if the agreement is mutually beneficial for the parties e.g. elites' power is threatened by competition and the entitlement of the government would help them to diminish it. In return, the government would acquire information and control over the peripheries' policies. Afghanistan since 2001, is an example of a beneficial pact between government and elites; entitling some select set of warlords as governors yielded a strongman brand of governance in two key provinces.
806:
protection... whether people want it or not". Furthermore, Lane argued that a monopoly was best equipped to produce and control violence. This, he argued, was due to the fact that competition within a monopoly raised costs, and that producing violence renders larger economies of scale. Although the logic was consistent with the predatory theory of the state in early modern Europe, Herbst's point of view was criticized by several scholars including Richard Joseph who were concerned that the application of the predatory theory was an excessive approach to Darwinism. Many have disregarded the limited view of this theory and have instead extended it to include strong external threats of any kind. External threats to the state produce stronger institutional capacities to extract resources from the state.
964:– appears to remain. Therefore, while the Accords may be deemed successful because they prevented the outbreak of war, this 'success' was tainted by the implications made by a subsequent report published by the Commission of Historical Clarification in February 1999. Its particular institutions were singled out as responsible for extensive human rights abuses. State institutions were assigned responsibility for 93% of these, and the guerrilla forces for 3%. In unexpectedly strong language, the report described Guatemalan governmental policy at the height of the war as a policy of genocide. The reinforcement of these state institutions as part of the peace-building process taints it by association. 1042:
for the bottom 15 countries to reach the state capability level of the best performer if their capabilities keep growing at the same average rate with which they have grown since their political independence. Other indexes suggest that countries are not catching up: the bureaucratic quality and corruption index from the International Country Risk Guide (ICRG) has a negative pace of growth for the bottom 30 countries. The authors argue that the capability trap shows that external assistance to increase state capacity has not been successful in accelerating the development process. They identify that this implementation failure may occur through two techniques: i)
819:
elites. In open access orders, entry is open to all. The logic of the open access state is based on impersonality. Both systems are interdependent and are only stable when both have similar access frameworks, either limited or open. Transitioning from a limited access order to an open access order involves difficult, radical changes based on three "doorstep conditions": 1) rule of law for elites, 2) perpetual life for organizations, and 3) political control of the military. Once all three initial conditions are satisfied, more incremental changes can be made to move the state further in the direction of an open access order.
955:. Where it has accomplished a degree of stability such as in Haiti and Liberia, it endures pressure 'to transition from heavy and costly security-oriented peacekeeping operations to lighter, peace-building-oriented missions'. Introducing state-building to mandates is controversial not only because this would entail extra costs and commitments but also because 'the expansion of peacekeeping into these areas has de facto extended the authority of the Security Council, with political, financial, institutional, and bureaucratic implications that have yet to be fully addressed'. 702:
environment in order to make wider political and economic development possible. So far, the results of using the state-building approach to peacebuilding have been mixed, and in many places, such as in the Balkans, Afghanistan and Iraq, the initial high expectations set by the international community have not been met. The literature on state-building has always been very clear that building states has historically been a violent process and the outcomes in the above-mentioned cases and many others confirm the destabilizing and often violent nature of state-building.
1098:
governance capabilities for a market-friendly state. These include, in particular, the capabilities to protect stable property rights, enforce the rule of law, effectively implement anti-corruption policies and achieve government accountability." This good governance paradigm is a market-enhancing process that emerged in the 1990s. This approach involves enforcing the rule of law, creating stronger property rights, and reducing corruption. By focusing on improving these three traits, a country can improve its market efficiency. There is a theoretical cycle of
1262:, a number of scholars have suggested that in focusing on internal rivalries, rather than challenging colonial borders, rulers were "less likely to see their economies as a resource to be nurtured than as an object of periodic plunder—the analogy to Olson's (1993) roving bandits should be clear" (Thies, 2004: 58). In the absence of external threats, rulers thus had no impetus to replicate the patterns described by Tilly — war-making, coercion and resource extraction — that had proven crucial to the process of centralization of power in the states of Europe. 1080:
primary education to teach a common culture, political values and beliefs, and political behaviors. Education can also improve human capital and encourage economic growth; however, the correlation between access to education and the level of skills of the population is weak. While some suggest that education has a destabilizing effect on authoritarian states, and therefore authoritarian states will refrain from providing it, the historical record shows that authoritarian governments frequently expanded education provision rather than reduced it.
810:
drivers, the political and military machine of the state has no direction to follow, and therefore, without this direction, war and the increased resources extracted from war can not be used for growth. On the other hand, internal wars, i.e. civil wars, have a negative effect on the extraction of a state. Internal rivals to the state decrease the state's capacity to unify and extract from its citizens. Rivals usually will bargain with the state to lower their tax burden, and gain economic or political privileges.
1301:, another dimension of state-building, which includes the management of human capital within the realm of service along with the delivery of public services, remains another major challenge for post-conflict African nations. Academics have built models of the political economy in post-conflict African societies to understand the trade-off between the capability, delivery, and stability of public-service administration, and policies that result in weak civil service rooted in the nations' legacies of conflict. 1128:
property rights, regulatory quality, corruption, and voice and accountability. There was little correlation found between increasing property rights and growth rates per capita GDP. Similarly, there is disagreement among development researchers as to whether it is more beneficial to promote a comprehensive set of reforms or to promote a minimal set of necessary reforms in contexts of poor institutionalization. Proponents of the latter approach have put forward the concept of "good enough governance".
1289:, but after the Tanzanians had removed Amin, they left the country. Although African states do not experience widespread interstate war, Herbst argues they need it to reform the tax structure and to build a national identity. Herbst concludes that war in Africa is likely to occur when African leaders realize that their economic reforms and efforts to build a national identity do not work and in desperation will start wars to build the states that their countries need. 582: 934:
order to institutionalise peace'. Paris' model including the peace-building and state-building is one of the better-known ones. He advocates an Internationalisation Before Liberalisation (IBL) approach, arguing that peace-building must be geared towards building liberal and effective states, thus 'avoiding the pathologies of liberalization, while placing war-shattered states on a long-term path to democracy and market-oriented economics'.
943:
democracy in order to reduce the tendency toward arbitrary power and give voice to all segments of society; the rule of law in order to reduce human rights violations; a market economy free from corruption in order to discourage individuals from believing that the surest path to fortune is by capturing the state; conflict management tools; and a culture of tolerance and respect'. Such ambitious goals are questionable when the
794:
these lords and their private armies could become potential threats to the king's power during peacetime. Originally, structures were created to facilitate extraction from the king's subordinates in exchange for protection (from their enemies and from the state), covering the expenses of war campaigns. However, extraction also economically strengthened the states, allowing them to expand their hold over the use of violence.
662: 1171:
ineffective redistribution of resources. Therefore, for these policies to work, there must be coordination efforts to ensure that growth-oriented and redistributive strategies initiated by the central government are implemented regionally. Furthermore, government elites must be in favor of low-income groups and grass root groups should be able to engage with local authorities during policy making.
1235:
counterparts did. This can be explained by the predatory theory. Studies on the extraction of tax revenues have demonstrated that both external and internal rivals affect the ability of a state to develop and extract resources from its citizens. Interstate rivals had a positive effect on the state's capacity to extract resources while intrastate rivals had a negative effect on state building.
1246:'s theory that external threats strengthen the state's capacity to extract taxes from its citizens can apply to developing countries in Africa. The presence of both external state rivals and internal ethnic rivals prompted states to increase their extraction of taxes from citizens while internal political rivals failed to affect the extraction of taxes. The 1276:
population's support for the "national project" (2000: 126). In a later article, Herbst argues that war in Europe led to strong states and that without war African states will remain weak. In Europe, external threats allowed states to tax, increase taxation, and forge a national identity. Additionally, the states that were invaded and taken over (such as
1150:
policy regimes like New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Continental Europe has been more resistant to implementing this type of policy. In developing countries, the implementation of these types of infrastructure has been difficult because the markets for the delivery of services are imperfect and increase the danger of
909:. The conflation of these two concepts has been highly controversial and has been used by opposing ideological and political forces to attempt to justify or reject as an illegal military occupation the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Hence, regime change by outside intervention should be differentiated from state-building. 1280:
or Ireland) by stronger countries were militarily and politically weak. African states are poor, have weak governments, and are fragmented on ethnic or regional lines. According to theory, these weak African states should be susceptible to external threats, but this is not the case. In Africa, Herbst
1230:
in 1854, Brazil in 1888), socializing property rights over land, and eliminating public monopolies, which fostered long-term stability that facilitated economic growth and established a new political economy for these new nations. The growth and stability seen in Latin America, however, did come at a
963:
were considered successful, 'the formal substance of these agreements has not altered power structures that have been in place for decades (if not centuries) in any substantial manner. The underlying (informal) understanding among elites – that their privileges and hold on power are not to be touched
3092:
to the right path'. The second Saudi state was born only six years after the demise of the first, during which time the land formerly ruled by the Saudi-Wahhabi alliance had 'returned to unbridled tribal rivalry and feuding'. The second Saudi Kingdom ended in 1887 and was characterised by internal
1041:
Pritchett, Woolcock & Andrews (2013) offer a criticism of why state-building fails to work. They claim that many countries are in a capability trap – countries are, at most, converging at a very low pace to the same levels of state capacity. They estimate that on average, it would take 672 years
1020:
is the process of collecting rents in order to provide resources for the governed. Taxing is the most common form of extraction. Tilly argues that state-building was not intended, but once it has begun, extraction capacity was necessary. Furthermore, Herbst argues that war is a catalyst to start or
933:
emphasises that peace-building and state-building are not the same, it does recognise the nexus between them and the reinforcement of one component has on the other: 'peace-building is primarily associated with post-conflict environments, and state-building is likely to be a central element of it in
836:
In his study on countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America, Joel Migdal presented the necessary and sufficient conditions for establishing a strong state. He considered "massive societal dislocation" that weakens old social control and institutions as the necessary condition. Such cases include the
809:
In harnessing this increased capacity, Cameron Thies describes the state as a machine that requires a "driver" that is able to use the increased capacity to expand the influence and power of government. The driver can be a state personnel, a dominant class, or a charismatic individual. Without these
1141:
approach first emerged in New Zealand and the United Kingdom in the 1980s. New Public management uses market-like reforms within the public sector to provide the government with the necessary power to implement a development plan for the economy while also using competitive market-based techniques
1079:
Education is used in both democratic and authoritarian contexts to promote state-building. In both democratic and authoritarian contexts, education seeks to promote social order and political stability by teaching citizens to respect the state’s authority from a young age. Governments often turn to
1127:
While it is understood that improving rule of law and reducing corruption are important methods for increasing the stability and legitimacy of a government, it is not certain whether this approach is a good basis for a state-building approach. Researchers have looked at this approach by measuring
1097:
is a very broadly used term for successful ways a government can create public institutions that protect people's rights. There has been a shift in good governance ideals, and as Kahn states, "The dominant 'good governance' paradigm identifies a series of capabilities that, it argues are necessary
983:
stated that "along with establishing security, the core task of peace-building is to build effective public institutions that, through negotiations with civil society, can establish a consensual framework for governance with the rule of law". Additionally, a 2004 UN study found that a number of UN
975:
Conversely, state corruption can mean that state-building efforts serve only one ethnic, religious or other minority group, exacerbating tensions that could escalate toward violence. State building can also assist predatory states to strengthen their institutions, reinforcing abusive authority and
971:
Sometimes peace-building efforts bypass the state in an effort to bring peace and development more quickly, for example, it was found that many NGOs in the Democratic Republic of Congo were building schools without involving the state. The state also may be part of the problem and over-reliance on
919:
Neotrusteeship, shared sovereignty and other new models of intervention rest on the assumptions that intervention is the most effective strategy for state-building and that countries cannot recover from the failures of government without external interference. However, Jeremy M. Weinstein proposes
1179:
European states replicated or bequeathed their institutions in the territories they colonized, but many new emerging states have evolved differently. European states consolidated after long years of internal and external struggles that greatly differ in context from the struggles of some recently
1166:
is beneficial because "It seeks to reduce rent-seeking behavior and inefficient resource allocation associated with centralized power by dispersing such power to lower levels of government, where the poor are likely to exercise influence and a variety of actors may participate in the provision of
1006:. Higher state capacity has been strongly linked to long-term economic development, as state capacity can establish law and order, private property rights, and external defense, as well as support development by establishing a competitive market, transportation infrastructure, and mass education. 818:
In their paper, Douglass North, John Wallis, and Barry Weingast offer an alternative framework - limited access orders - for understanding the predatory role of the state. In limited access orders, entry is restricted in both economic and political systems to produce rents that benefit the ruling
793:
For Tilly, these activities are interdependent and rely on the state's ability to monopolize violence. Before the consolidation of European states, kings relied on their lords’ troops to emerge victorious from war, setting the final boundaries of their territories after years of campaigns. Still,
701:
The general argument in the academic literature on state-building is that without security, other tasks of state-building are not possible. Consequently, when state-building as an approach to peacebuilding is employed in conflict and post-conflict societies, the first priority is to create a safe
1308:
politics and that this type of structure may resolve to produce an increased level of political order. A number of scholars have criticized this claim for its "excessively Darwinian", overly deterministic and Euro-centric understanding of the process of state-formation (Thies, 2004: 69, see also
967:
Efforts to "appease" or 'buy off' certain interest groups in the interest of peace may undermine state-building exercises, as may power-sharing exercises that could favor the establishment of a political settlement over effective state institutions. Such political settlements could also enshrine
1205:
and subsequent decades of decline caused by violence, reduced state capacity, and fiscal fragmentation. This trajectory is markedly successful relative to other post-conflict societies at the time. Latin Americans also enacted a number of liberal public policies swiftly and effectively, such as
1149:
In this type of government, large bureaucracies within a ministry (the principal) no longer maintain their hierarchical structure but rather are composed of operational arms of ministries that perform the role of an individual agent. The strategy has been more prominent in liberal market-driven
958:
Due to the inherently political nature of state building, interventions to build the state can hinder peace, increasing group tensions and sparking off further conflict. The strength of the consensus that has emerged stressing that 'a minimally functioning state is essential to maintain peace',
937:
Despite the advantages of incorporating peace-building and state-building in the same model, applicational limitations should be recognised. In practice, foreign and security policymaking still largely treat them as separate issues. Moreover, academics often approach the subjects from different
1421:
A number of scholars have questioned whether the Palestinian Authority was ever in a position to build a viable state. Edward Said, Neve Gordon and Sara Roy – among others – have argued that the PNA was designed as an "occupation subcontractor", only strengthening the power asymmetries between
942:
peacekeeping missions for there have been instances where peace-builders aspire not only to go a step further and eradicate the causes of violence, which are oftentimes not agreed upon by the parties to the conflict, but also to invest 'post-conflict societies with various qualities, including
1275:
explains that "domestic security threats, of the type African countries face so often, may force the state to increase revenue; however, civil conflicts result in fragmentation and considerable hostility among different segments of the population", undermining the state's ability to rally the
1188:
Governments that have implemented the top-down method present the idea that there is a great external threat that can diminish the capabilities of a state and its citizens. The perceived threat creates an incentive that focuses policy, makes elites cooperate, and facilitates the adoption of a
1170:
Limitations to decentralization are the reduction of the meritocratic basis can limit the state's capacity to serve citizens, limited control of the fiscal funds at the local level can prevent effectiveness and substantial inequalities in fiscal capacity among different regions can create an
3087:
the House of Saud subscribes to a strict adherence of Wahhabi interpretations of Islam, which engenders legitimacy. The state narrative of the Kingdom's history begins in the eighteenth century, a time of chaos akin to the Hobbesian state of nature. The emergence of the first Saudi state
1429:", stuck in a situation where core functions of the state remain in the hands of the Israeli state. They identify structural issues within the Oslo process and disunity and corruption prevalent among the Palestinian elite as key reasons for the failure of Palestinian state-building efforts. 1234:
In the 21st century it became economically and politically difficult for Latin American countries to increase revenues, which led states to turn to debt for the necessary resources to pay for war. As a result, Latin American countries did not establish the same tax basis that their European
717:
up to modern times. Historical science views state-building as a complex phenomenon, influenced by various contributing factors (geopolitical, economic, social, cultural, ethnic, religious) and analyzes those factors and their mutual relations from the perspective of a particular historical
1037:
State capacity is widely cited as an essential element to why some countries are rich and others are not: "It has been established that the richest countries in the world are characterized by long-lasting and centralized political institutions"; "that poverty is particularly widespread and
928:
State-building does not automatically guarantee peace-building, a term denoting actions that identify and support structures that strengthen and solidify peace in order to prevent a relapse into conflict. Whilst they have traditionally been considered two individual concepts with a complex
1390:
found international assistance to have been "sporadic and fragmented". Besides the lack of consistent outside support, the report identified key challenges to Palestinian state-building at the international level, including the lack of horizon on "final status" negotiations, failed peace
900:
Similarly, state-building (nation-building) has at times been conflated with military invasions that aim at regime change. This derives in part from the military invasions by Germany and Japan in World War II and resulting states and became especially prevalent following the October 2001
805:
to propose allowing failed states to dissolve or engage in war to re-create the process endured by European countries. The process of extraction in exchange for protection was further argued by economic historian Frederic Lane. Lane argued that "governments are in the business of selling
892:
conventionally refers to the population itself, as united by identity history, culture and language). The issues debated related to the structures of the state (and its relationship to society) and as a result, state-building is the more broadly accepted term. In political science
1346:. Nonetheless, the PLO and other Palestinian organisations have historically made great efforts to install institutions of a type commonly associated with states in the Palestinian territories - as well as in countries with large numbers of Palestinian residents. Examples include: 1250:
in power try to maintain their position by catering to the majority ethnic group and by increasing taxes to gain the resources to diminish threats from minority ethnic groups. Thus the presence of internal ethnic rivals creates the capacity to significantly increase the
1058:
While many specific techniques exist for creating a successful state-building strategy, three specific approaches have been identified by the recent 2010 UNRISD report. These three approaches would all fall under the endogenous school of thinking, and are:
897:' usually has a quite distinct meaning, defined as the process of encouraging a sense of national identity within a given group of people, a definition that relates more to socialisation than state capacity (see the ODI, OECD, and DFID reports cited above). 2151: 3312:
Hilal, J., and Khan, M.H. State Formation under the PA:Potential Outcomes and their Viability. In M.H. Khan, G. Giacaman and I. Amundsen (eds.), State Formation in Palestine: Viability and Governance during a Social Transformation. Abingdon: Routledge,
929:
relationship giving rise to dilemmas and necessitating trade-offs, as Grävingholt, Gänzle and Ziaja argue, the two actually representative two diverging perspectives on the same issue: a shaky social peace and a breakdown of political order. Whilst the
887:
Some commentators have used the term "nation-building" interchangeably with "state-building" (e.g. Rand report on America's role in nation-building). However, in both major schools of theory, the state is the focus of thinking rather than the "nation"
1386:, calling for the "establishment of an independent, democratic and viable Palestinian state". Despite this official acknowledgement of the legitimacy of PNA state-building by the international community, a 2011 report prepared by the London-based 1116:
Corruption and rent-seeking from interest groups will lead to weak property rights that prevent citizens and smaller businesses from the assurance that their property is safe under national law. Also, corruption will result in welfare-reducing
827:
According to Didac Queralt, cheap access to credit in the 19th century inhibited state building, as the access to external loans made it unnecessary for rulers to undertake domestic political reforms to enhance internal resource extraction.
938:
angles. Heathershaw and Lambach caution that in practice, interventions that attempt the ambitious goals that Paris (amongst others) sets out may be coercive and driven by a 'the end justifies the means' outlook. This concern is acute in
1293:
disagrees with Herbst in the grade of influence of war on state-building, stating that European colonization and European influences in the continent impacted more deeply the creation of institutions, and therefore, states in Africa.
1334:, a claim that is universally recognized. However, it does not have sole jurisdiction over the areas it claims. In addition, many of those it aims to represent currently reside elsewhere, most notably in Arab countries such as 685:
by the international community. Observers across the political and academic spectra have come to see the state-building approach as the preferred strategy to peacebuilding in a number of high-profile conflicts, including the
3425: 3130:
The story of Saudi state-building is, to an unusual extent, an internal one the impetus behind the Saudi process - a quest for taxes and a unified army - matches that of Europe more than that of post-colonial states
1357:(June 1967), where the installation of parallel structures of power and mechanisms for taxation and education led to largely independent Palestinian enclaves which formed a threat to the power and legitimacy of the 2148: 1038:
intractable in countries that lack a history of centralized government... and are internally fragmented"; "and countries with weak state capacity are particularly vulnerable to civil war and internal conflict".
3446:
Persson, Anders (2012). "Building a state or maintaining the occupation? International support for Fayyad’s state-building project", Journal of Conflict Transformation and Security, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp: 101–119.
1136:
In response to the unsuccessful attempts to strengthen government administrations, developing countries began to adopt market-oriented managerial reforms under the pressure of the IMF and the World Bank. The
2105: 1382:
continues to engage in state-building activities in its territories and has referred to the "State of Palestine" in official documents since 2013. In 2003 the United Nations Security Council passed
1267: 658:
approaches to complex questions related to the role of various contributing factors (geopolitical, economic, social, cultural, ethnic, religious, internal, external) in state-building processes.
721:
A second approach conceptualizes state-building as an activity undertaken by external actors (foreign countries) attempting to build, or re-build, the institutions of a weaker, post-conflict or
1154:
by companies. For successful implementation, governments must have the infrastructure to measure reliable performance indicators and the capacity to regulate the behavior of private providers.
1142:
to enhance public sector production. It changed public sector employment practices from career tenure positions towards limited-term contracts for senior staff, locally determined pay, and
1146:. Secondly, the provision of government services shifted towards contracts, franchising, vouchers, and user charges in an effort to promote efficiency in service provision to citizens. 797:
Out of these four activities, war making was the main stimulus to increasing the level of taxation, thus increasing the capacity of the state to extract resources otherwise known as
3191:
Bastian, S. and Luckham, R. ) In Can Democracy Be Designed? : The Politics of Institutional Choice in Conflict-Torn Societies (Ed, Luckham, R.) Zed, London Collier, P., 2003.
2784:
Bates, Robert H., John H. Coatsworth, and Jeffrey G. Williamson. 2007. “Lost Decades: Post-independence Performance in Latin America and Africa.” The Journal of Economic History
2149:
http://mercury.ethz.ch/serviceengine/Files/ISN/37978/ipublicationdocument_singledocument/c1f807e7-a86a-4a6d-a248-10c6c1315551/en/2002_03_Guatemala+Five+Years+After+the+Peace.pdf
1877: 1106:
The cycle starts with economic stagnation, which can enhance and expose the inefficiencies of a weak government and rule of law that cannot effectively respond to the problem.
3451:
State Building and the Consequences of Constitutional Choices in Conflictual Environments: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Fiji, Lebanon, Northern Ireland, South Africa and Uganda
1013:
of a state to collect taxes, enforce law and order, and provide public goods." Berwick and Christia consolidate the literature on state capacity into 3 different domains:
998:
State capacity is the ability of a government to accomplish policy goals, either generally or in reference to specific aims. A state that lacks capacity is defined as a
3403: 3152:
They use three index to estimate state capability: i) ‘government effectiveness’ from the World Bank World Governance Indicators, ii) resource efficiency, from the
2102: 3512: 2794:
Thies, Cameron G. (2004-01-01). "State Building, Interstate and Intrastate Rivalry: A Study of Post-Colonial Developing Country Extractive Efforts, 1975-2000".
930: 1033:
is the capacity of the state to provide output for the citizens. This output can include the enforcement of laws and the setting of policies for the citizens.
2336:"Understanding, Defining, and Measuring State Capacity in India: Traditional, Modern, and Everything in Between An Asian Survey Special Issue on India" 2278: 1046:, by which the structures of institutions are imitated (specific rules are followed) but they do not serve purposes functional to the society; and ii) 980: 2741:
Evans, P.; Rauch, J. E. (1999). "Bureaucracy and growth: A cross-national analysis of the effects of "Weberian" state structures on economic growth".
1650:
Thies, C. G. (2004). "State building, interstate and intrastate rivalry: A study of post-colonial developing country extractive efforts, 1975–2000".
1392: 912:
There have been some examples of military interventions by international or multilateral actors with a focus on building state capacity, including
3422:
No Part of the Mother Country, but Distinct Dominions - Law, State-Building and Governance in England, Massachusetts und South Carolina, 1630-1769
2085: 1383: 1587:
Peter B. Evans, D. R.; Skocpol, T., War Making and State Making as Organized Crime Bringing the State Back In. Cambridge University Press: 1985.
3508: 2505: 1281:
notes, there are rarely conflicts between states, and if there are, war does not threaten the existence of the state. For example, in the 1979
1009:
There are various definitions of state capacity among scholars. Economic historians Noel Johnson and Mark Koyama define state capacity as "the
959:
ignores the complications that poor legitimacy and inclusion can lead to in the future, undermining the whole process. For instance, while the
2677:
Khan, Mushtaq H. Governance, Growth and Poverty Reduction. Governance, Growth and Poverty Reduction. DESA, June 2009. Web. 10 Nov. 2010. <
2030: 1422:
occupier and occupied. Another strand of analysis, associated with Jamil Hilal and Mushtaq Khan (2004), portrays the PNA as a "transitional
845:
in Europe, the expansion of world economy into Asia, Africa and Latin America in the 19th century, the combination of war and revolution in
3536: 1444:) and monarchical dynastic control, Saudi Arabia formed as a 20th-century state with the support of tax revenues and military development. 984:
officials felt that the establishment of effective and legitimate state institutions was a key indicator of a successful peace operation.
2775:
Kay, C., Why East Asia overtook Latin America: agrarian reform, industrialisation and development. Third World Q 2002, 23 (6), 1073-1102.
1252: 2832:
Herbst, J.: States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control. (Second edition) (eBook, Paperback and Hardcover)
1109:
Because a government is unaccountable or weak, small interest groups can use the government for their specific interests, resulting in
610: 1991:
Grävingholt J, Gänzle S & ZiajaS (2009), Policy Brief: Concepts of Peacebuilding and State Building – How Compatible Are They?,
3279:
Engin, Kenan. 2013, Nation-Building' - Theoretische Betrachtung und Fallbeispiel: Irak. (Dissertation), Nomos, Baden-Baden 2013,
2103:
http://www.operationspaix.net/DATA/DOCUMENT/4997~v~Implications_of_Peacebuilding_and_Statebuilding_in_United_Nations_Mandates.pdf
673:, wearing White Crown of Upper Egypt (recto), and Red Crown of Lower Egypt (verso), thus representing the unification of the land 2127: 1996: 1330:
whose legal statehood is widely recognized (though not by some major global powers), as well as representative status over the
746:
When studying the development of European states, Charles Tilly identified that European countries engaged in four activities:
3069:. Library of Modern Middle East Studies. Vol. 132 (reprint ed.). London: I.B. Tauris (published 2015). p. 80. 2288: 1794: 902: 695: 3006: 3292:: State Building. Governance and World Order in the Twenty-First Century, Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2004a, 1201:
Latin America experienced a period of rapid economic growth and political stability in the late-19th century, following
3551: 1952: 1927: 1277: 979:
In practice, however, there remains confusion over the differences between state-building and peace-building. The UN's
2080:
Barnett M & Zuercher C (n.D), The Peacebuilder's Contract: How External State-building Reinforces Weak Statehood,
3472: 3397: 3297: 3284: 3251:
Darden, Keith; Mylonas, Harris (2012). "The Promethean Dilemma: Third-Party State-building in Occupied Territories".
3117: 3074: 3045: 2840: 1982:
Boutros-Ghali, Boutros (1992) "An Agenda for Peace: Preventive Diplomacy, peacemaking and peacekeeping", paragraph 21
1852: 1819: 1323: 478: 3511:: `States in Development: Understanding State-building,' UK Department for International Development, London, 2008 3153: 1102:
which explains how a lack of property rights and strong corruption, among other problems, leads to market failure:
952: 687: 84: 2428: 2013: 2469:
Hameiri, Shahar (2007). "Failed states or a failed paradigm? State capacity and the limits of institutionalism".
1521: 2097:
Sherman J & Tortolani B (2009), Implications of Peacebuilding and Statebuilding in United Nations Mandates,
801:. The increased capacity of the state to extract taxes from its citizens while facing external threats prompted 3541: 2086:
http://www.sfb-governance.de/teilprojekte/projekte_phase_1/projektbereich_c/c1/barnettzuercherstatebuilding.pdf
1387: 1379: 603: 473: 251: 99: 1290: 1202: 1027:
is the ability of lower-level governmental workers to implement the agenda of the higher level of government.
691: 488: 3502: 3230: 2954:
Blum, Jurgen, Fotini Christia, and Daniel Rogger. 2016. “Public Service Reform in Post-Conflict Societies.”
1464: 237: 69: 40: 2008:
OECD (2008), Concepts and Dilemmas of State Building in Fragile Situations: from Fragility to Resilience,
1812:
Strong societies and weak states : state-society relations and state capabilities in the third world
1358: 541: 2143:
Salvesen H (2002), Guatemala: Five Years after the Peace Accords: The Challenges of Implementing Peace,
1845:
Strong societes and weak states : state-society relations and state capabilities in the third world
1510: 882: 74: 45: 3482:, in: The Formation of National States in Western Europe, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975. 1635: 3546: 2572:
Johnson, Noel D.; Koyama, Mark (April 2017). "States and economic growth: Capacity and constraints".
1505: 1479: 1050:, in which the pressure exerted by outsiders undermines the organic evolution of local institutions. 869:
World historical timing when exogenous political forces were in favor of concentrated social control;
596: 201: 2868: 1304:
Several researchers have emphasized that the internal violence seen in Africa was characteristic of
1120:
These weak property rights and welfare-reducing interventions lead to high transaction cost markets.
1454: 1395:, and the weak economic base, in addition to profound challenges at the domestic level, including: 1190: 316: 206: 2538:"State Capacity Redux: Integrating Classical and Experimental Contributions to an Enduring Debate" 3316:
Hehir, A. and Robinson, N. (eds.) "State-building: Theory and Practice", Routledge, London, 2007.
3238:
The Quest for Viable Peace: International Intervention and Strategies for Conflict Transformation
1578:, eds P.B. Evans, D. Rueschemeyer, & T. Skocpol. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985. 1327: 1282: 1143: 642:
processes of creation, institutional consolidation, stabilization and sustainable development of
246: 3556: 913: 483: 425: 371: 2320: 2124:
Menocal, Alina Rocha (2009) 'State-building for peace’: navigating an arena of contradictions
2928:
Robinson, James A (2002). "States and Power in Africa by Jeffrey I. Herbst: A Review Essay".
1138: 1064: 906: 842: 789:– control of the creation and transformation of goods and services produced by the population 303: 136: 1997:
https://www.die-gdi.de/uploads/media/Peacebuilding_and_Statebuilding__Draft_11-03-09__01.pdf
3497: 1490: 413: 284: 274: 259: 186: 104: 2554: 2537: 713:
A historical approach focuses on state-building processes, from the earliest emergence of
8: 3178: 1485: 1305: 525: 435: 289: 191: 141: 79: 3415:
State in Society. Studying how States and Societies Transform and Constitute one another
1231:
high social cost in the form of social inequality that continued into the 21st century.
3377: 3337: 3268: 2984: 2910: 2902: 2856: 2811: 2758: 2714: 2678: 2486: 2451: 2410: 2363: 2238: 2188: 2063: 1900: 1736: 1694: 1614: 1375: 1331: 1151: 563: 156: 3156:, and iii) ‘progressive deterioration in public services’ from the Failed State Index. 3088:(1744-1818) is introduced in Saudi literature as a 'corrective mechanism bringing the 2598:
Herbst, Jeffrey. "War and the State in Africa." International Security (1990): 117-139
3468: 3408:
Latecomer State Formation: Political Geography and Capacity Failure in Latin America.
3393: 3293: 3280: 3272: 3113: 3070: 3041: 2914: 2836: 2807: 2718: 2709: 2692: 2655: 2490: 2414: 2402: 2355: 2316: 2284: 2242: 2192: 2067: 1948: 1923: 1858: 1848: 1825: 1815: 1790: 1663: 1459: 651: 647: 558: 232: 94: 89: 50: 23: 3352:, Working Paper, March, Department of Political Science, University of Aarhus, 2002. 3213:
You, The People: The United Nations, Transitional Administration, and State-Building
2125: 1904: 1698: 1618: 3369: 3329: 3302: 3289: 3260: 3208: 2976: 2937: 2894: 2803: 2750: 2704: 2645: 2622:
UNRISD 2010. "Building State Capacity for Poverty Reduction." Chapter 10, pp. 3–36.
2581: 2549: 2478: 2455: 2443: 2394: 2347: 2230: 2180: 2053: 2045: 1892: 1763: 1728: 1686: 1659: 1606: 1163: 1068: 655: 508: 264: 118: 3182: 2482: 2381:
Brambor, Thomas; Goenaga, Agustín; Lindvall, Johannes; Teorell, Jan (2020-02-01).
2264:
Call, Charles T (2008), "The Fallacy of the 'Failed State', 'Third World Quarterly
865:
in the 20th century. Furthermore, he listed the sufficient conditions as follows:
3264: 3107: 3062: 3035: 2533: 2155: 2131: 2109: 1784: 1554: 1495: 1469: 1417:(perceived) securitization of authority across the occupied Palestinian territory 1298: 1259: 1094: 1089: 1060: 894: 798: 627: 586: 568: 393: 378: 2731:
UNRISD 2010. “Building State Capacity for Poverty Reduction.” Chapter 10, p. 30.
3436: 2830: 2014:
http://www.oecd.org/dac/governance-peace/conflictandfragility/docs/41100930.pdf
1500: 1272: 1215: 1099: 993: 944: 939: 875:
A group of skillful and independent people to build an independent bureaucracy;
802: 666: 643: 464: 383: 337: 279: 3520:
The Sovereignty Paradox: The Norms and Politics of International Statebuilding
2967:
Jabber, F (1973). "The Arab regimes and the Palestinian revolution, 1967-71".
2650: 2633: 2585: 2506:"State Capacity in Historical Political Economy: What, How, Why, and Why Not?" 2234: 2184: 2049: 3530: 2659: 2406: 2398: 2359: 2351: 1971:
Autonomous Recovery and International Intervention in Comparative Perspective
1896: 1862: 1829: 1474: 1243: 999: 947:
has been seen to struggle in high-profile conflict-ridden situations such as
783:– intervention in the allocation of goods among the members of the population 682: 681:
has developed into becoming an integral part and even a specific approach to
665:
One of the earliest examples of state-building iconography: Two sides of the
388: 366: 341: 171: 1574:
Tilly, Charles (1985). "War making and state making as organized crime," in
3320:
Joseph, R (1997). "Correspondence: Responding to State Failure in Africa".
2382: 2308: 1516: 1423: 1371: 1207: 1110: 1003: 777:– authoritative settlement of disputes among members of the population 722: 151: 1719:
Thies, C. G. (2005). "War, rivalry, and state building in Latin America".
1690: 1610: 972:
the state by international actors can worsen security inside the country.
883:
Differentiating "nation-building", military intervention and regime change
878:
Skillful top leadership that would take advantage of the above conditions.
646:, from the earliest emergence of statehood up to the modern times. Within 3196:
International Governance of War-torn Territories: Rule and Reconstruction
2941: 1426: 1354: 872:
Existence of military threat from outside or other groups in the country;
838: 455: 420: 323: 311: 176: 3358:
Approaches to the State: Alternative Conceptions and Historical Dynamics
2367: 2335: 1677:
Joseph, R.; Herbst, J. (1997). "Responding to State Failure in Africa".
581: 3485: 3341: 2988: 2906: 2815: 2762: 2058: 1740: 631: 545: 535: 530: 269: 131: 3441:
A Free City in the Balkans: Reconstructing a Divided Society in Bosnia
3381: 1634:
Tilly, Charles: War Making and State Making as Organized Crime. 1985.
3174:
in: American Political Science Review, Vol. 82, No. 3, 853–874, 1988.
2634:"The Non-Democratic Roots of Mass Education: Evidence from 200 Years" 2447: 1755: 1438: 1223: 960: 759:– eliminating or neutralizing their rivals inside their own territory 714: 430: 328: 211: 166: 146: 3333: 2980: 2898: 2754: 2147:
for the Norwegian Ministry for Foreign Affairs, p. 13, Available at
2031:"Introduction: Post-Conflict Spaces and Approaches to Statebuilding" 1732: 718:
situation, that is characteristic of every state-building process.
3373: 3184:
State-building in Medieval France: Studies in Early Angevin History
1768: 1636:
http://www.jesusradicals.com/uploads/2/6/3/8/26388433/warmaking.pdf
1366:, where a similar process exacerbated ethnic and religious tensions 1286: 635: 553: 513: 196: 181: 161: 30: 3112:. Cornell Studies in Political Economy. Cornell University Press. 3109:
The Price of Wealth: Economies and Institutions in the Middle East
1437:
Based on kernels of tribalism, fundamentalist religious ideology (
2255:
High-Level Panel of Threats, Challenges and Change, paragraph 229
1786:
Pawned States: State Building in the Era of International Finance
1363: 1339: 1211: 854: 771:– acquiring the means of carrying out the first three activities. 661: 639: 468: 126: 2383:"The Lay of the Land: Information Capacity and the Modern State" 1756:"A Conceptual Framework for Interpreting Recorded Human History" 1754:
North, Douglass; Wallis, John; Weingast, Barry (December 2006).
1350: 1335: 1247: 1123:
High transaction cost markets lead back to economic stagnation.
948: 862: 858: 728:
A third approach conceptualizes state-building as development.
670: 518: 460: 358: 2885:
Herbst, Jeffery (Spring 1990). "War and the State in Africa".
3480:
Western-State Making and Theories of Political Transformation
3460:, in: Social Science Research Items, Vol. 36, June 1–8, 1982. 2962: 2960: 2380: 2221:
Call, Charles T (2008). "The Fallacy of the 'Failed State'".
2171:
Call, Charles T (2008). "The Fallacy of the 'Failed State'".
1441: 1402:
weak linkages between ruling authorities and society at large
1343: 1219: 850: 846: 3490:
World Development Report 1997: The State in a Changing World
3220:
Breaking the Conflict Trap: Civil War and Development Policy
3067:
Saudi Arabia and Iran: Power and Rivalry in the Middle East
2208:
Warlords, strongman governors, and the state in Afghanistan
1597:
Herbst, J (1996). "Responding to State Failure in Africa".
1227: 3348:
Kjær, Anne M./Hansen, Ole H./Frølund Thomsen, Jens Peter:
2957: 2618: 2616: 2614: 2612: 2610: 2608: 2606: 2604: 1973:. Jeremy M. Weinstein. Working Paper Number 57. April 2005 765:– eliminating or neutralizing the enemies of their clients 710:
State-building has been conceptualized in different ways.
3309:, in: Journal of Democracy, Vol. 15, No. 2, 17–31, 2004b. 3229:, Center for Strategic and International Studies and the 2280:
State Capacity and Economic Development: Present and Past
731: 3388:
Kuzio, Taras/Kravchuk, Robert S./D’Anieri, Paul (eds.):
3063:"3: History, politics and narratives of state-building" 2601: 2166: 2164: 1074: 2679:
http://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2009/wp75_2009.pdf
2161: 3465:
Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 900–1990
2313:
The Oxford Handbook of Historical Political Economy
2145:
International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO)
2099:
International Forum Challengers of Peace Operations
1753: 1714: 1712: 1710: 1708: 1645: 1643: 1630: 1628: 1556:
Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990-1992
1534: 976:further fueling grievances and popular resistance. 2471:Journal of International Relations and Development 2028: 1581: 981:High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change 831: 3037:Routledge Handbook of International Statebuilding 2283:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1, 15–24. 3528: 3225:The Commission on Post-Conflict Reconstruction, 3203:Empire in Denial: The Politics of State-building 3034:Chandler, David; Sisk, Timothy D. (2013-09-02). 1814:. Princeton University press. pp. 269–275. 1705: 1640: 1625: 3498:The U.S. Army Stability Operations Field Manual 3245:A Review of Peace Operations: A Case for Change 2531: 1878:"Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States" 3417:, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. 2333: 2082:Research Partnership on Postwar State-Building 1847:. Princeton University press. pp. 91–92. 1258:Drawing on Charles Tilly's theory of European 753:– eliminating or neutralizing their own rivals 3250: 3004: 2571: 1374:of 1993-2000 and the ongoing construction of 1174: 604: 3033: 2306: 2205: 1942: 1876:Fearon, James; Laitin, David (Spring 2004). 1875: 1676: 3410:New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2021. 2429:"State Capacity, Conflict, and Development" 2334:Akbar, Nafisa; Ostermann, Susan L. (2015). 1414:lack of capacity of formal PNA institutions 2740: 1399:a lack of an internal political settlement 1285:War, Tanzania invaded Uganda to overthrow 1162:In reference to state-building approaches 611: 597: 3390:State and Institution Building in Ukraine 3093:feuding, tribal rivalries, and civil war. 2880: 2878: 2708: 2673: 2671: 2669: 2649: 2553: 2057: 2038:Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding 1767: 3522:, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. 3433:, University of Colorado, Boulder, 2004. 3177: 3105: 2927: 2829:Herbst, Jeffrey Ira (21 December 2014). 2631: 2503: 2276: 1540: 1131: 923: 813: 660: 3355: 3007:"The Palestinian State-building Agenda" 2690: 2632:Paglayan, Agustina S. (February 2021). 2468: 1920:The Beginner's Guide to Nation-Building 1917: 1782: 736: 3529: 3319: 2966: 2884: 2875: 2828: 2666: 2302: 2300: 2134:London: Overseas Development Institute 1842: 1809: 1596: 732:Application of state-building theories 16:Term in social sciences and humanities 3060: 3000: 2998: 2793: 2567: 2565: 2555:10.1146/annurev-polisci-072215-012907 2527: 2525: 2120: 2118: 2024: 2022: 1966: 1964: 1943:Stewart, Rory; Knaus, Gerald (2012). 1721:American Journal of Political Science 1718: 1649: 1552: 903:United States invasion of Afghanistan 2307:Dincecco, Mark; Wang, Yuhua (2023). 2220: 2170: 1918:Dobbins, James; et al. (2007). 1760:National Bureau of Economic Research 1570: 1568: 1566: 1391:negotiations, the tightening of the 669:(31st century BC) depicting pharaoh 3537:International relations terminology 3453:, IPA Policy Paper, New York, 2006. 2297: 2270: 2029:Heathershaw, J; Lambach, D (2008). 1157: 822: 677:Since the end of the 20th century, 13: 3492:, Washington, DC: World Bank, 1997 3240:, USIP Press, Washington DC, 2005. 2995: 2693:"Good Enough Governance Revisited" 2562: 2542:Annual Review of Political Science 2522: 2115: 2019: 1961: 1326:(PLO) claims sovereignty over the 1083: 1075:Education as a state-building tool 14: 3568: 3356:Krasner, Stephen D (1984). "1984 2638:American Political Science Review 1993:German Institute for Development, 1563: 1324:Palestine Liberation Organization 987: 479:Biology and political orientation 3307:The Imperative of State-Building 3215:. Oxford University Press, 2004. 3154:Bertelsmann Transformation Index 2808:10.1111/j.0020-8833.2004.00291.x 2710:10.1111/j.1467-7679.2007.00385.x 2574:Explorations in Economic History 1664:10.1111/j.0020-8833.2004.00291.x 1196: 953:Democratic Republic of the Congo 580: 3247:, King's College, London, 2003. 3236:Covey, Dziedzic, et al. (eds.) 3146: 3098: 3054: 3027: 2948: 2921: 2822: 2796:International Studies Quarterly 2787: 2778: 2769: 2734: 2725: 2684: 2625: 2592: 2497: 2462: 2421: 2374: 2327: 2258: 2249: 2214: 2199: 2137: 2091: 2074: 2002: 1985: 1976: 1936: 1911: 1869: 1836: 1803: 1776: 1747: 1652:International Studies Quarterly 1522:Stabilization of fragile states 1432: 832:Social changes and social order 690:, and war-related conflicts in 3350:Conceptualizing State Capacity 3014:Overseas Development Institute 2930:Journal of Economic Literature 2835:. Princeton University Press. 2158:. (Retrieved 23 January 2016). 2012:, Vol 9, Issue 3, Available at 1947:. W. W. Norton & Company. 1789:. Princeton University Press. 1670: 1590: 1546: 1388:Overseas Development Institute 1380:Palestinian National Authority 1370:Despite the break-down of the 1189:nationalistic ideology. In an 1183: 1031:Regulatory–productive capacity 1002:or, in a more extreme case, a 474:Theories of political behavior 100:Political history of the world 1: 3513:(States in Development paper) 3163: 3106:Chaudhry, Kiren Aziz (2015). 3005:Rocha Menocal, Alina (2011). 2504:Dincecco, Mark (2022-05-02). 2483:10.1057/palgrave.jird.1800120 2387:Comparative Political Studies 2210:. Cambridge University Press. 2206:Mukhopadhyay, Dipali (2014). 1999:(Retrieved 23 January 2016). 1528: 1053: 1021:increase extractive capacity. 741: 705: 489:Critique of political economy 3503:University of Michigan Press 3265:10.1080/17449057.2011.596127 3231:Association of the U.S. Army 2969:Journal of Palestine Studies 2743:American Sociological Review 2691:Grindle, Merilee S. (2007). 2112:(Retrieved 23 January 2016). 2088:(Retrieved 23 January 2016). 1559:. Blackwell. pp. 96–97. 1465:Rule according to higher law 1317: 1297:As of 2017 the provision of 688:Israeli–Palestinian conflict 654:sciences, there are several 70:Outline of political science 7: 3467:, Malden: Blackwell, 2000, 3443:, London: I.B.Tauris, 2009. 3392:, London: Routledge, 1998, 2016:(Retrieved 23 January 2016) 1447: 1044:systemic isomorphic mimicry 10: 3573: 3458:Bringing the State Back In 1576:Bringing the State Back In 1511:States and Power in Africa 1268:States and Power in Africa 1175:Examples of state-building 1087: 991: 75:Index of politics articles 3552:International development 2697:Development Policy Review 2651:10.1017/S0003055420000647 2586:10.1016/j.eeh.2016.11.002 2235:10.1080/01436590802544207 2185:10.1080/01436590802544207 2050:10.1080/17502970802436296 1506:Environmental determinism 1238: 2399:10.1177/0010414019843432 2352:10.1525/as.2015.55.5.845 1897:10.1162/0162288041588296 1843:Migdal, Joel S. (1988). 1810:Migdal, Joel S. (1988). 1762:. Working Paper Series. 1455:Constitutional economics 1405:weakened social cohesion 1191:authoritarian government 3172:The Return to the State 2277:Dincecco, Mark (2017). 1783:Queralt, Didac (2022). 1553:Tilly, Charles (1990). 1378:(1967 to present), the 1328:Palestinian Territories 1312: 1144:performance-related pay 961:Guatemala Peace Accords 484:Political organisations 247:International relations 85:Politics by subdivision 3478:Tilly, Charles (ed.): 3322:International Security 3233:, Washington DC, 2003. 3187:. Aldershot: Variorum. 2887:International Security 2010:Journal on Development 1945:Can Intervention Work? 1885:International Security 1679:International Security 1599:International Security 1480:The White Man's Burden 1048:premature load-bearing 914:Bosnia and Herzegovina 857:and mass migration in 692:Bosnia and Herzegovina 674: 626:as a specific term in 3542:Public administration 3404:Mazzuca, Sebastián L. 3243:Dahrendorf, N. (Ed.) 3061:Mabon, Simon (2013). 2223:Third World Quarterly 2173:Third World Quarterly 1691:10.1162/isec.22.2.175 1611:10.1162/isec.21.3.120 1306:early modern European 1139:New Public Management 1132:New Public Management 1065:New Public Management 1025:Governmental capacity 924:Versus peace-building 907:2003 invasion of Iraq 814:Limited access orders 664: 564:Political campaigning 304:Public administration 137:Collective leadership 3362:Comparative Politics 3205:. Pluto Press, 2006. 3198:, Oxford: OUP, 2005. 3179:Bachrach, Bernard S. 2942:10.1257/jel.40.2.510 2084:, p.2, Available at 1922:. RAND Corporation. 1491:Political settlement 737:The predatory theory 414:Separation of powers 285:Political psychology 260:Comparative politics 238:political scientists 225:Academic disciplines 105:Political philosophy 3449:Samuels, Kirsti S, 2101:, p.2, Available at 1486:Disaster capitalism 1376:Israeli settlements 1018:Extractive capacity 587:Politics portal 436:Election commission 407:Government branches 290:Political sociology 142:Confessional system 80:Politics by country 3222:OUP, Oxford, 2003. 2154:2016-10-08 at the 2130:2009-12-22 at the 2108:2016-10-08 at the 1995:p.2, Available at 1411:weak civil-society 1384:UN Resolution 1515 1359:Hashemite monarchy 1332:Palestinian people 1152:regulatory capture 843:Hundred Years' War 675: 270:Political analysis 202:Semi-parliamentary 3413:Migdal, Joel S.: 3303:Fukuyama, Francis 3290:Fukuyama, Francis 3209:Chesterman, Simon 3194:Caplan, Richard, 3170:Almond, Gabriel: 2532:Berwick, Elissa; 2442:(1): 1–34. 2010. 2290:978-1-108-33755-7 1796:978-0-691-23152-5 1460:Political economy 1408:gender inequality 621: 620: 569:Political parties 509:Electoral systems 233:Political science 207:Semi-presidential 119:Political systems 95:Political history 90:Political economy 3564: 3547:Decentralization 3463:Tilly, Charles: 3456:Skopcol, Theda: 3385: 3345: 3276: 3188: 3157: 3150: 3134: 3133: 3127: 3126: 3102: 3096: 3095: 3084: 3083: 3058: 3052: 3051: 3031: 3025: 3024: 3022: 3020: 3011: 3002: 2993: 2992: 2964: 2955: 2952: 2946: 2945: 2925: 2919: 2918: 2882: 2873: 2872: 2866: 2862: 2860: 2852: 2850: 2849: 2826: 2820: 2819: 2791: 2785: 2782: 2776: 2773: 2767: 2766: 2738: 2732: 2729: 2723: 2722: 2712: 2688: 2682: 2675: 2664: 2663: 2653: 2629: 2623: 2620: 2599: 2596: 2590: 2589: 2569: 2560: 2559: 2557: 2534:Christia, Fotini 2529: 2520: 2519: 2517: 2516: 2501: 2495: 2494: 2466: 2460: 2459: 2448:10.3982/ECTA8073 2433: 2425: 2419: 2418: 2378: 2372: 2371: 2331: 2325: 2324: 2309:"State Capacity" 2304: 2295: 2294: 2274: 2268: 2262: 2256: 2253: 2247: 2246: 2218: 2212: 2211: 2203: 2197: 2196: 2168: 2159: 2141: 2135: 2122: 2113: 2095: 2089: 2078: 2072: 2071: 2061: 2035: 2026: 2017: 2006: 2000: 1989: 1983: 1980: 1974: 1968: 1959: 1958: 1940: 1934: 1933: 1915: 1909: 1908: 1882: 1873: 1867: 1866: 1840: 1834: 1833: 1807: 1801: 1800: 1780: 1774: 1773: 1771: 1751: 1745: 1744: 1716: 1703: 1702: 1674: 1668: 1667: 1647: 1638: 1632: 1623: 1622: 1594: 1588: 1585: 1579: 1572: 1561: 1560: 1550: 1544: 1538: 1278:Poland-Lithuania 1265:For example, in 1180:emerged states. 1164:decentralization 1158:Decentralization 1069:Decentralization 823:External lending 613: 606: 599: 585: 584: 375: 320: 275:Political theory 265:Election science 255: 241: 19: 18: 3572: 3571: 3567: 3566: 3565: 3563: 3562: 3561: 3527: 3526: 3525: 3518:Zaum, Dominik: 3495:The U.S. Army. 3437:Parish, Matthew 3429:Paris, Roland, 3420:Nagl, Dominik. 3334:10.2307/2539373 3166: 3161: 3160: 3151: 3147: 3137: 3124: 3122: 3120: 3103: 3099: 3081: 3079: 3077: 3059: 3055: 3048: 3032: 3028: 3018: 3016: 3009: 3003: 2996: 2981:10.2307/2535482 2965: 2958: 2953: 2949: 2926: 2922: 2899:10.2307/2538753 2883: 2876: 2864: 2863: 2854: 2853: 2847: 2845: 2843: 2827: 2823: 2792: 2788: 2783: 2779: 2774: 2770: 2755:10.2307/2657374 2739: 2735: 2730: 2726: 2689: 2685: 2676: 2667: 2630: 2626: 2621: 2602: 2597: 2593: 2570: 2563: 2530: 2523: 2514: 2512: 2502: 2498: 2467: 2463: 2431: 2427: 2426: 2422: 2379: 2375: 2332: 2328: 2305: 2298: 2291: 2275: 2271: 2266:, 29:8, p 1498. 2263: 2259: 2254: 2250: 2219: 2215: 2204: 2200: 2169: 2162: 2156:Wayback Machine 2142: 2138: 2132:Wayback Machine 2123: 2116: 2110:Wayback Machine 2096: 2092: 2079: 2075: 2033: 2027: 2020: 2007: 2003: 1990: 1986: 1981: 1977: 1969: 1962: 1955: 1941: 1937: 1930: 1916: 1912: 1880: 1874: 1870: 1855: 1841: 1837: 1822: 1808: 1804: 1797: 1781: 1777: 1752: 1748: 1733:10.2307/3647725 1717: 1706: 1675: 1671: 1648: 1641: 1633: 1626: 1595: 1591: 1586: 1582: 1573: 1564: 1551: 1547: 1539: 1535: 1531: 1526: 1496:Sovereign state 1470:Nation-building 1450: 1435: 1320: 1315: 1309:Joseph, 1997). 1299:public services 1283:Uganda-Tanzania 1260:state formation 1241: 1199: 1186: 1177: 1160: 1134: 1113:and corruption. 1095:Good governance 1092: 1090:Good governance 1086: 1084:Good governance 1077: 1061:Good Governance 1056: 996: 990: 926: 895:nation-building 885: 834: 825: 816: 799:fiscal capacity 744: 739: 734: 708: 628:social sciences 617: 579: 574: 573: 504: 503: 494: 493: 451: 450: 441: 440: 409: 408: 399: 398: 394:Public interest 379:Domestic policy 369: 362: 361: 350: 349: 314: 307: 306: 295: 294: 256: 249: 242: 235: 227: 226: 217: 216: 122: 121: 110: 109: 65: 64: 55: 24:Politics series 17: 12: 11: 5: 3570: 3560: 3559: 3554: 3549: 3544: 3539: 3524: 3523: 3516: 3506: 3493: 3483: 3476: 3461: 3454: 3447: 3444: 3434: 3427: 3418: 3411: 3401: 3386: 3374:10.2307/421608 3368:(2): 223–246. 3353: 3346: 3328:(2): 175–181. 3317: 3314: 3310: 3300: 3287: 3277: 3248: 3241: 3234: 3223: 3218:Collier, Paul 3216: 3206: 3199: 3192: 3189: 3175: 3167: 3165: 3162: 3159: 3158: 3144: 3143: 3142: 3141: 3136: 3135: 3118: 3097: 3075: 3053: 3046: 3026: 2994: 2956: 2947: 2936:(2): 510–519. 2920: 2893:(4): 117–139. 2874: 2865:|website= 2841: 2821: 2786: 2777: 2768: 2749:(5): 748–765. 2733: 2724: 2703:(5): 553–574. 2683: 2665: 2644:(1): 179–198. 2624: 2600: 2591: 2561: 2521: 2496: 2477:(2): 122–149. 2461: 2420: 2393:(2): 175–213. 2373: 2346:(5): 845–861. 2326: 2296: 2289: 2269: 2257: 2248: 2213: 2198: 2160: 2136: 2114: 2090: 2073: 2044:(3): 269–289. 2018: 2001: 1984: 1975: 1960: 1954:978-0393342246 1953: 1935: 1929:978-0833039880 1928: 1910: 1868: 1853: 1835: 1820: 1802: 1795: 1775: 1769:10.3386/w12795 1746: 1727:(3): 451–465. 1704: 1685:(2): 175–184. 1669: 1639: 1624: 1605:(3): 120–144. 1589: 1580: 1562: 1545: 1532: 1530: 1527: 1525: 1524: 1519: 1514: 1508: 1503: 1501:State (polity) 1498: 1493: 1488: 1483: 1477: 1472: 1467: 1462: 1457: 1451: 1449: 1446: 1434: 1431: 1419: 1418: 1415: 1412: 1409: 1406: 1403: 1400: 1368: 1367: 1361: 1319: 1316: 1314: 1311: 1291:James Robinson 1273:Jeffrey Herbst 1240: 1237: 1216:Saint-Domingue 1198: 1195: 1185: 1182: 1176: 1173: 1159: 1156: 1133: 1130: 1125: 1124: 1121: 1118: 1117:interventions. 1114: 1107: 1100:market failure 1088:Main article: 1085: 1082: 1076: 1073: 1055: 1052: 1035: 1034: 1028: 1022: 994:State capacity 992:Main article: 989: 988:State capacity 986: 945:United Nations 940:United Nations 925: 922: 884: 881: 880: 879: 876: 873: 870: 833: 830: 824: 821: 815: 812: 803:Jeffrey Herbst 791: 790: 784: 778: 772: 766: 760: 754: 743: 740: 738: 735: 733: 730: 707: 704: 679:state-building 667:Narmer Palette 624:State-building 619: 618: 616: 615: 608: 601: 593: 590: 589: 576: 575: 572: 571: 566: 561: 556: 551: 550: 549: 533: 528: 523: 522: 521: 511: 505: 501: 500: 499: 496: 495: 492: 491: 486: 481: 476: 471: 458: 452: 449:Related topics 448: 447: 446: 443: 442: 439: 438: 433: 428: 423: 417: 416: 410: 406: 405: 404: 401: 400: 397: 396: 391: 386: 384:Foreign policy 381: 376: 363: 357: 356: 355: 352: 351: 348: 347: 346: 345: 331: 326: 321: 308: 302: 301: 300: 297: 296: 293: 292: 287: 282: 280:Policy studies 277: 272: 267: 262: 257: 245: 243: 231: 228: 224: 223: 222: 219: 218: 215: 214: 209: 204: 199: 194: 189: 184: 179: 174: 169: 164: 159: 154: 149: 144: 139: 134: 129: 123: 117: 116: 115: 112: 111: 108: 107: 102: 97: 92: 87: 82: 77: 72: 66: 63:Primary topics 62: 61: 60: 57: 56: 54: 53: 48: 43: 37: 34: 33: 27: 26: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3569: 3558: 3557:Peacebuilding 3555: 3553: 3550: 3548: 3545: 3543: 3540: 3538: 3535: 3534: 3532: 3521: 3517: 3514: 3510: 3509:Whaites, Alan 3507: 3504: 3500: 3499: 3494: 3491: 3487: 3484: 3481: 3477: 3474: 3473:1-55786-067-X 3470: 3466: 3462: 3459: 3455: 3452: 3448: 3445: 3442: 3438: 3435: 3432: 3428: 3426: 3423: 3419: 3416: 3412: 3409: 3405: 3402: 3399: 3398:0-415-17195-4 3395: 3391: 3387: 3383: 3379: 3375: 3371: 3367: 3363: 3359: 3354: 3351: 3347: 3343: 3339: 3335: 3331: 3327: 3323: 3318: 3315: 3311: 3308: 3304: 3301: 3299: 3298:0-8014-4292-3 3295: 3291: 3288: 3286: 3285:9783848706846 3282: 3278: 3274: 3270: 3266: 3262: 3258: 3254: 3253:Ethnopolitics 3249: 3246: 3242: 3239: 3235: 3232: 3228: 3224: 3221: 3217: 3214: 3210: 3207: 3204: 3201:Chandler, D. 3200: 3197: 3193: 3190: 3186: 3185: 3180: 3176: 3173: 3169: 3168: 3155: 3149: 3145: 3139: 3138: 3132: 3121: 3119:9781501700330 3115: 3111: 3110: 3101: 3094: 3091: 3078: 3076:9780857722423 3072: 3068: 3064: 3057: 3049: 3047:9781135940010 3043: 3040:. Routledge. 3039: 3038: 3030: 3015: 3008: 3001: 2999: 2990: 2986: 2982: 2978: 2975:(2): 79–101. 2974: 2970: 2963: 2961: 2951: 2943: 2939: 2935: 2931: 2924: 2916: 2912: 2908: 2904: 2900: 2896: 2892: 2888: 2881: 2879: 2870: 2858: 2844: 2842:9780691164137 2838: 2834: 2833: 2825: 2817: 2813: 2809: 2805: 2801: 2797: 2790: 2781: 2772: 2764: 2760: 2756: 2752: 2748: 2744: 2737: 2728: 2720: 2716: 2711: 2706: 2702: 2698: 2694: 2687: 2680: 2674: 2672: 2670: 2661: 2657: 2652: 2647: 2643: 2639: 2635: 2628: 2619: 2617: 2615: 2613: 2611: 2609: 2607: 2605: 2595: 2587: 2583: 2579: 2575: 2568: 2566: 2556: 2551: 2547: 2543: 2539: 2535: 2528: 2526: 2511: 2507: 2500: 2492: 2488: 2484: 2480: 2476: 2472: 2465: 2457: 2453: 2449: 2445: 2441: 2437: 2430: 2424: 2416: 2412: 2408: 2404: 2400: 2396: 2392: 2388: 2384: 2377: 2369: 2365: 2361: 2357: 2353: 2349: 2345: 2341: 2337: 2330: 2322: 2318: 2314: 2310: 2303: 2301: 2292: 2286: 2282: 2281: 2273: 2267: 2261: 2252: 2244: 2240: 2236: 2232: 2228: 2224: 2217: 2209: 2202: 2194: 2190: 2186: 2182: 2178: 2174: 2167: 2165: 2157: 2153: 2150: 2146: 2140: 2133: 2129: 2126: 2121: 2119: 2111: 2107: 2104: 2100: 2094: 2087: 2083: 2077: 2069: 2065: 2060: 2055: 2051: 2047: 2043: 2039: 2032: 2025: 2023: 2015: 2011: 2005: 1998: 1994: 1988: 1979: 1972: 1967: 1965: 1956: 1950: 1946: 1939: 1931: 1925: 1921: 1914: 1906: 1902: 1898: 1894: 1890: 1886: 1879: 1872: 1864: 1860: 1856: 1854:9780691010731 1850: 1846: 1839: 1831: 1827: 1823: 1821:9780691010731 1817: 1813: 1806: 1798: 1792: 1788: 1787: 1779: 1770: 1765: 1761: 1757: 1750: 1742: 1738: 1734: 1730: 1726: 1722: 1715: 1713: 1711: 1709: 1700: 1696: 1692: 1688: 1684: 1680: 1673: 1665: 1661: 1657: 1653: 1646: 1644: 1637: 1631: 1629: 1620: 1616: 1612: 1608: 1604: 1600: 1593: 1584: 1577: 1571: 1569: 1567: 1558: 1557: 1549: 1542: 1541:Bachrach 1995 1537: 1533: 1523: 1520: 1518: 1515: 1512: 1509: 1507: 1504: 1502: 1499: 1497: 1494: 1492: 1489: 1487: 1484: 1481: 1478: 1476: 1475:Regime change 1473: 1471: 1468: 1466: 1463: 1461: 1458: 1456: 1453: 1452: 1445: 1443: 1440: 1430: 1428: 1425: 1416: 1413: 1410: 1407: 1404: 1401: 1398: 1397: 1396: 1394: 1389: 1385: 1381: 1377: 1373: 1365: 1362: 1360: 1356: 1352: 1349: 1348: 1347: 1345: 1341: 1337: 1333: 1329: 1325: 1310: 1307: 1302: 1300: 1295: 1292: 1288: 1284: 1279: 1274: 1270: 1269: 1263: 1261: 1256: 1254: 1249: 1245: 1236: 1232: 1229: 1225: 1221: 1217: 1213: 1209: 1204: 1197:Latin America 1194: 1192: 1181: 1172: 1168: 1165: 1155: 1153: 1147: 1145: 1140: 1129: 1122: 1119: 1115: 1112: 1108: 1105: 1104: 1103: 1101: 1096: 1091: 1081: 1072: 1070: 1066: 1062: 1051: 1049: 1045: 1039: 1032: 1029: 1026: 1023: 1019: 1016: 1015: 1014: 1012: 1007: 1005: 1001: 1000:fragile state 995: 985: 982: 977: 973: 969: 965: 962: 956: 954: 950: 946: 941: 935: 932: 921: 917: 915: 910: 908: 904: 898: 896: 891: 877: 874: 871: 868: 867: 866: 864: 860: 856: 852: 848: 844: 840: 829: 820: 811: 807: 804: 800: 795: 788: 785: 782: 779: 776: 773: 770: 767: 764: 761: 758: 755: 752: 749: 748: 747: 729: 726: 724: 723:failing state 719: 716: 711: 703: 699: 697: 693: 689: 684: 683:peacebuilding 680: 672: 668: 663: 659: 657: 653: 649: 645: 641: 637: 633: 629: 625: 614: 609: 607: 602: 600: 595: 594: 592: 591: 588: 583: 578: 577: 570: 567: 565: 562: 560: 557: 555: 552: 547: 543: 539: 538: 537: 534: 532: 529: 527: 524: 520: 517: 516: 515: 512: 510: 507: 506: 498: 497: 490: 487: 485: 482: 480: 477: 475: 472: 470: 466: 462: 459: 457: 454: 453: 445: 444: 437: 434: 432: 429: 427: 424: 422: 419: 418: 415: 412: 411: 403: 402: 395: 392: 390: 389:Civil society 387: 385: 382: 380: 377: 373: 368: 367:Public policy 365: 364: 360: 354: 353: 343: 339: 335: 334: 332: 330: 327: 325: 322: 318: 313: 310: 309: 305: 299: 298: 291: 288: 286: 283: 281: 278: 276: 273: 271: 268: 266: 263: 261: 258: 253: 248: 244: 239: 234: 230: 229: 221: 220: 213: 210: 208: 205: 203: 200: 198: 195: 193: 190: 188: 187:Parliamentary 185: 183: 180: 178: 175: 173: 172:Hybrid regime 170: 168: 165: 163: 160: 158: 155: 153: 150: 148: 145: 143: 140: 138: 135: 133: 130: 128: 125: 124: 120: 114: 113: 106: 103: 101: 98: 96: 93: 91: 88: 86: 83: 81: 78: 76: 73: 71: 68: 67: 59: 58: 52: 49: 47: 44: 42: 39: 38: 36: 35: 32: 29: 28: 25: 21: 20: 3519: 3496: 3489: 3479: 3464: 3457: 3450: 3440: 3430: 3421: 3414: 3407: 3389: 3365: 3361: 3357: 3349: 3325: 3321: 3306: 3256: 3252: 3244: 3237: 3226: 3219: 3212: 3202: 3195: 3183: 3171: 3148: 3129: 3123:. Retrieved 3108: 3100: 3089: 3086: 3080:. Retrieved 3066: 3056: 3036: 3029: 3017:. Retrieved 3013: 2972: 2968: 2950: 2933: 2929: 2923: 2890: 2886: 2846:. Retrieved 2831: 2824: 2802:(1): 53–72. 2799: 2795: 2789: 2780: 2771: 2746: 2742: 2736: 2727: 2700: 2696: 2686: 2641: 2637: 2627: 2594: 2577: 2573: 2545: 2541: 2536:(May 2018). 2513:. Retrieved 2509: 2499: 2474: 2470: 2464: 2439: 2436:Econometrica 2435: 2423: 2390: 2386: 2376: 2343: 2340:Asian Survey 2339: 2329: 2312: 2279: 2272: 2265: 2260: 2251: 2226: 2222: 2216: 2207: 2201: 2176: 2172: 2144: 2139: 2098: 2093: 2081: 2076: 2041: 2037: 2009: 2004: 1992: 1987: 1978: 1970: 1944: 1938: 1919: 1913: 1888: 1884: 1871: 1844: 1838: 1811: 1805: 1785: 1778: 1759: 1749: 1724: 1720: 1682: 1678: 1672: 1658:(1): 53–72. 1655: 1651: 1602: 1598: 1592: 1583: 1575: 1555: 1548: 1536: 1517:Peacekeeping 1436: 1433:Saudi Arabia 1420: 1372:Oslo process 1369: 1321: 1303: 1296: 1266: 1264: 1257: 1242: 1233: 1203:independence 1200: 1187: 1178: 1169: 1161: 1148: 1135: 1126: 1111:rent-seeking 1093: 1078: 1057: 1047: 1043: 1040: 1036: 1030: 1024: 1017: 1010: 1008: 1004:failed state 997: 978: 974: 970: 966: 957: 936: 927: 918: 911: 899: 889: 886: 835: 826: 817: 808: 796: 792: 786: 781:Distribution 780: 775:Adjudication 774: 768: 762: 757:State making 756: 750: 745: 727: 720: 712: 709: 700: 694:, Iraq, and 678: 676: 634:, refers to 623: 622: 317:street-level 192:Presidential 152:Dictatorship 22:Part of the 3501:Ann Arbor, 3431:A War's End 3227:Play to Win 2510:Broadstreet 2229:(8): 1498. 2179:(8): 1499. 2059:10036/58174 1891:(4): 5–43. 1427:quasi-state 1355:Six-Day War 1184:Regime type 1167:services". 839:Black Death 696:Afghanistan 656:theoretical 456:Sovereignty 421:Legislature 324:Technocracy 312:Bureaucracy 177:Meritocracy 157:Directorial 3531:Categories 3486:World Bank 3164:Literature 3125:2017-09-27 3082:2017-09-27 3019:24 January 2848:2016-01-24 2515:2022-05-02 1529:References 1393:occupation 1353:after the 1054:Approaches 905:and March 787:Production 769:Extraction 763:Protection 751:War making 742:War making 706:Definition 648:historical 640:historical 632:humanities 546:Governance 536:Government 531:Federalism 132:City-state 3273:145382064 3259:: 85–93. 3104:Compare: 2915:153804691 2867:ignored ( 2857:cite book 2719:154987071 2660:0003-0554 2548:: 71–91. 2491:143220503 2415:133292367 2407:0010-4140 2360:0004-4687 2243:153402082 2193:153402082 2068:147118661 1863:876100982 1830:876100982 1439:Wahhabist 1318:Palestine 1253:tax ratio 1226:in 1813, 1224:New Spain 1222:in 1804, 1218:in 1793, 1208:abolition 715:statehood 652:political 636:political 526:Unitarism 514:Elections 502:Subseries 431:Judiciary 426:Executive 329:Adhocracy 212:Theocracy 167:Feudalism 147:Democracy 3488: : 3181:(1995). 2580:: 1–20. 2368:26364315 2152:Archived 2128:Archived 2106:Archived 1905:57559356 1699:57566369 1619:57565552 1513:– a book 1482:– a poem 1448:See also 1287:Idi Amin 1271:(2000), 951:and the 841:and the 554:Ideology 372:doctrine 333:Service 197:Republic 182:Monarchy 162:Federacy 51:Category 31:Politics 3505:, 2009. 3424:(2013). 3342:2539373 2989:2535482 2907:2538753 2816:3693563 2763:2657374 2456:2887246 2321:4022645 1741:3647725 1364:Lebanon 1340:Lebanon 1248:leaders 1212:slavery 1011:ability 855:Vietnam 559:Culture 469:Country 127:Anarchy 41:Outline 3471:  3396:  3382:421608 3380:  3340:  3296:  3283:  3271:  3116:  3073:  3044:  2987:  2913:  2905:  2839:  2814:  2761:  2717:  2658:  2489:  2454:  2413:  2405:  2366:  2358:  2319:  2287:  2241:  2191:  2066:  1951:  1926:  1903:  1861:  1851:  1828:  1818:  1793:  1739:  1697:  1617:  1424:client 1351:Jordan 1342:, and 1336:Jordan 1239:Africa 1067:, and 949:Darfur 890:nation 863:Israel 859:Taiwan 671:Narmer 644:states 519:voting 461:Polity 359:Policy 338:Public 252:theory 3378:JSTOR 3338:JSTOR 3313:2004. 3269:S2CID 3140:Notes 3010:(PDF) 2985:JSTOR 2911:S2CID 2903:JSTOR 2812:JSTOR 2759:JSTOR 2715:S2CID 2681:>. 2487:S2CID 2452:S2CID 2432:(PDF) 2411:S2CID 2364:JSTOR 2239:S2CID 2189:S2CID 2064:S2CID 2034:(PDF) 1901:S2CID 1881:(PDF) 1737:JSTOR 1695:S2CID 1615:S2CID 1442:Islam 1344:Syria 1244:Tilly 1220:Haiti 851:Korea 847:China 542:forms 465:State 342:Civil 46:Index 3469:ISBN 3394:ISBN 3294:ISBN 3281:ISBN 3114:ISBN 3090:umma 3071:ISBN 3042:ISBN 3021:2016 2869:help 2837:ISBN 2656:ISSN 2403:ISSN 2356:ISSN 2317:SSRN 2285:ISBN 1949:ISBN 1924:ISBN 1859:OCLC 1849:ISBN 1826:OCLC 1816:ISBN 1791:ISBN 1322:The 1313:Asia 1228:Peru 931:OECD 861:and 853:and 650:and 638:and 630:and 3370:doi 3360:". 3330:doi 3261:doi 2977:doi 2938:doi 2895:doi 2804:doi 2751:doi 2705:doi 2646:doi 2642:115 2582:doi 2550:doi 2479:doi 2444:doi 2395:doi 2348:doi 2231:doi 2181:doi 2054:hdl 2046:doi 1893:doi 1764:doi 1729:doi 1687:doi 1660:doi 1607:doi 1210:of 725:. 698:. 3533:: 3439:: 3406:, 3376:. 3366:16 3364:. 3336:. 3326:22 3324:. 3305:: 3267:. 3255:. 3211:: 3128:. 3085:. 3065:. 3012:. 2997:^ 2983:. 2971:. 2959:^ 2934:40 2932:. 2909:. 2901:. 2891:14 2889:. 2877:^ 2861:: 2859:}} 2855:{{ 2810:. 2800:48 2798:. 2757:. 2747:64 2745:. 2713:. 2701:25 2699:. 2695:. 2668:^ 2654:. 2640:. 2636:. 2603:^ 2578:64 2576:. 2564:^ 2546:21 2544:. 2540:. 2524:^ 2508:. 2485:. 2475:10 2473:. 2450:. 2440:78 2438:. 2434:. 2409:. 2401:. 2391:53 2389:. 2385:. 2362:. 2354:. 2344:55 2342:. 2338:. 2315:. 2311:. 2299:^ 2237:. 2227:29 2225:. 2187:. 2177:29 2175:. 2163:^ 2117:^ 2062:. 2052:. 2040:. 2036:. 2021:^ 1963:^ 1899:. 1889:28 1887:. 1883:. 1857:. 1824:. 1758:. 1735:. 1725:49 1723:. 1707:^ 1693:. 1683:22 1681:. 1656:48 1654:. 1642:^ 1627:^ 1613:. 1603:21 1601:. 1565:^ 1338:, 1255:. 1071:. 1063:, 849:, 544:/ 467:/ 463:/ 340:/ 3515:. 3475:. 3400:. 3384:. 3372:: 3344:. 3332:: 3275:. 3263:: 3257:1 3131:. 3050:. 3023:. 2991:. 2979:: 2973:2 2944:. 2940:: 2917:. 2897:: 2871:) 2851:. 2818:. 2806:: 2765:. 2753:: 2721:. 2707:: 2662:. 2648:: 2588:. 2584:: 2558:. 2552:: 2518:. 2493:. 2481:: 2458:. 2446:: 2417:. 2397:: 2370:. 2350:: 2323:. 2293:. 2245:. 2233:: 2195:. 2183:: 2070:. 2056:: 2048:: 2042:2 1957:. 1932:. 1907:. 1895:: 1865:. 1832:. 1799:. 1772:. 1766:: 1743:. 1731:: 1701:. 1689:: 1666:. 1662:: 1621:. 1609:: 1543:. 1214:( 893:' 888:( 612:e 605:t 598:v 548:) 540:( 374:) 370:( 344:) 336:( 319:) 315:( 254:) 250:( 240:) 236:(

Index

Politics series
Politics
Outline
Index
Category
Outline of political science
Index of politics articles
Politics by country
Politics by subdivision
Political economy
Political history
Political history of the world
Political philosophy
Political systems
Anarchy
City-state
Collective leadership
Confessional system
Democracy
Dictatorship
Directorial
Federacy
Feudalism
Hybrid regime
Meritocracy
Monarchy
Parliamentary
Presidential
Republic
Semi-parliamentary

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.